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mesmerize
[ mez-muh-rahyz, mes- ]
verb (used with object)
This young pianist has mesmerized audiences with her incredible technique and range of musical expression.
- to hypnotize or put into a trancelike state; cause (someone) to be open to the power of suggestion or unable to act on their own:
According to ancient myth, the song of the sea nymphs mesmerized sailors, drawing them into disastrous waters.
- to cause or compel through fascination or by hypnotizing:
Advertising can easily mesmerize us into thinking that wealth is the same as money and possessions.
In this game scene, the warriors do not know they’ve been mesmerized into the service of the enemy.
mesmerize
/ ˈmɛzməˌraɪz /
verb
- a former word for hypnotize
- to hold (someone) as if spellbound
Derived Forms
- ˈmesmerˌizer, noun
- ˌmesmeriˈzation, noun
Other Words From
- mes·mer·i·za·tion [mez-m, uh, -rahy-, zey, -sh, uh, n, mes-], noun
- mes·mer·iz·er noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of mesmerize1
Example Sentences
Little is explained but much can be guessed about Rogowski’s character, whom the great German actor can’t help but make into a mesmerizing figure of storybook fragility.
A way to look at emergent behavior — the coordinated and mesmerizing flight of a flock of birds, for instance.
Salon goes through the ways Hernández has mesmerized audiences across the country.
I was reading a journal he kept in prison, and I was mesmerized by the quality of his writing and the precision of his observations.
The music was really unusual and, honestly, kind of mesmerizing.
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