释义 |
se·duc·tion \sə̇ˈdəkshən, sēˈ-\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle French, from Late Latin seduction-, seductio, from Latin, act of leading aside, from seductus (past participle of seducere to lead aside) + -ion-, -io -ion 1. : the act of seducing especially to wrong acts or beliefs < the effect of social seduction by public spectacles on an immature mind — Fredric Wertham > specifically : the enticement of a female by some statutes required to be then chaste to unlawful sexual intercourse by promise of marriage or other means of persuasion without use of force 2. : that which seduces or is adapted to seduce : a means of corrupting 3. : something that entices or influences by attraction or charm < the irresistible seduction of eloquence and literary pursuits — Norman Douglas > < the home carpenter usually succumbs to the seductions of the tool catalogs and buys an assortment of power tools — M.I.Zisowitz > |