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attraction Examples

EN[əˈtɹækʃən] [əˈtɹækʃ(ɪ̈)n] [əˈt͡ʃɹækʃ(ɪ̈)n] [-ækʃən]
US

    Examples of attraction in a Sentence

  • Examples of attraction
    1. For some, the attraction may be the new Yankee Stadium, a billion-dollar multiblock public-private behemoth whose curved bleachers are even now rising across East 161st Street from its older cousin.
    2. Whereas Christie had flirted with a lesbian identity prior to surgery, following surgery Christie found perself able to pursue per attraction to men, provided they related to per as a non-gendered person.
    3. The attraction was mutual and instant; they were sweet on one another from first sight.
    4. “The design aesthetic of New York is an undermarketed attraction,” said George A. Fertitta, chief executive of NYC & Company.
    5. The pay is OK, but the real attraction is all the benefits in kind.
    6. The Moon is held in its orbit by the attraction of the Earth's gravity. ‎
    7. The new mall should be a major attraction. ‎
    8. The season’s main attraction, the felicities of the sun, dimmed in the light of our competition and our growing friendliness.
    9. Many people joined the railways because the 'carrot' of a staff pass was a considerable attraction, whether for family travel or to grice at extremely low cost.
  • Examples of attractions
    1. So that over and above the public components – holidays, tourist attractions – there are private meanderings, linked to the climate as if this spell were a stretto passage in the year’s fugue: haphazard weather, aimless loves, unpredicted commitments…
    2. Cribbage is a most virtuous and respectable game, and yet scarcely, one would think, possessing in itself sufficient attractions to keep a young gentleman in his twentieth year tied to the board, and going through the quaint calculation night after night of "fifteen two, fifteen four, two for his nob, and one for his heels."
    3. [ …] not some cold dream-land; where all sensation is attenuated into a spiritual meagreness totally destitute of attractions for mortals; not a mere state, made up of certain unearthlinesses, of which no one can conceive and with which no one can sympathize; but a literal and material world, firm and ponderable as now, girthed and clothed with similar heavens, adorned with sunshine and showers, birds, trees, streams, melody, and flowers
    4. In connection with both are night-schools for adults, which are also largely attended by Arabs, Copts, Jews, Levantines, and Europeans of almost every nationality: the waifs-and-strays of Babeldom who have no time for school-work by day, but who take industriously to it six evenings a week under the attractions here offered.
Related Links:
  1. fr attraction
  2. en attractions
  3. fr attractions
  4. en attractional
Source: Wiktionary
Difficultness: Level 2
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Easy     ➨     Difficult
Definiteness: Level 8
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Definite    ➨     Versatile