Cautivar in english

Captivate

pronunciation: kæptɪveɪt part of speech: verb
In gestures

cautivar = captivate ; enthral [enthrall, -USA] ; charm ; mesmerise [mesmerize, -USA] ; beguile ; enchant ; capture + the imagination ; bewitch ; entrance ; smite ; get + Nombre + under + Posesivo + spell ; put + Nombre + under + Posesivo + spell ; attract ; engross ; enrapture ; grip ; ravish ; catch + Posesivo + imagination. 

Example: This article suggests a number of titles which can be relied on to captivate the young reader and arouse enthusiasm for further exploration of the world of books.Example: If one encounters a young patron who is an animal lover, the recommendation of a book such as Kipling's 'The Jungle Book' may enthrall him or her.Example: We will see the mountains of lobster traps and the charming crooked streets and hazy seascapes that charmed painter Fitzhugh Lane.Example: The article is entitled 'Have librarians become mesmerised by information technology?'.Example: Beguiling as the show is, it perhaps lacks major impact because it has taken elements from lacework and painting in such a way as to avoid the fundamental challenges of both.Example: The article 'The power to enchant: puppets in the public library' describes the construction of a puppet theatre in a public library.Example: This paper describes how a middle grade school teacher uses a core list of books to capture the imagination of his students and to encourage them to write honestly about their lives.Example: In legend a potion is a concoction used to heal, bewitch or poison people, made by a magician, sorcerer or witch.Example: Her husband is entranced with a woman who is manic-depressive.Example: It's hard to imagine a red-blooded man anywhere in the world who could look at her and not be 'smitten' with her.Example: After getting him under her spell, Clark reveals his powers to the woman, who immediately begins to exploit them for her own ends.Example: One glance from her eyes so dark and so brown, put him under her spell, his world spun around.Example: The range of data bases has attracted a number of academic libraries.Example: A good novel will engross me and have me switched off from the real world for hours.Example: He can play the piano like no one else and his impromptus of Schubert and Chopin are so beautiful that they enrapture and craze the listeners with delight.Example: Fight fever seemed to grip the whole nation when pugilism was in its prime, even though the sport was against the law.Example: Extremely ambitious in design and scope, it puzzled and troubled readers at least as much as it ravished them.Example: Thesaurofacet has caught the imagination of a number of other thesaurus constructors.

more:

» cautivar al mundomake + a big noise in the world .

Example: Mozart commented to Beethoven after hearing him perform, 'You will some day make a big noise in the world'.

» cautivar al públicocaptivate + the audience .

Example: She captivated the audience and poured her soul into every song.

Cautivar synonyms

catch in spanish: captura, pronunciation: kætʃ part of speech: verb, noun capture in spanish: capturar, pronunciation: kæptʃɜr part of speech: verb, noun charm in spanish: encanto, pronunciation: tʃɑrm part of speech: noun beguile in spanish: engañar, pronunciation: bɪgaɪl part of speech: verb entrance in spanish: Entrada, pronunciation: entrəns part of speech: noun trance in spanish: trance, pronunciation: træns part of speech: noun fascinate in spanish: fascinar, pronunciation: fæsəneɪt part of speech: verb enchant in spanish: encantar, pronunciation: entʃænt part of speech: verb enamor in spanish: estar enamorado, pronunciation: enæmɜr part of speech: verb bewitch in spanish: hechizar, pronunciation: bɪwɪtʃ part of speech: verb enamour in spanish: estar enamorado, pronunciation: enæmɜr part of speech: verb becharm in spanish: encanto, pronunciation: bekɑrm part of speech: verb
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