intriguing
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɪnˈtɹiːɡɪŋ/
Audio (UK) (file)
Adjective
intriguing (comparative more intriguing, superlative most intriguing)
- Causing a desire to know more; mysterious.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:mysterious
- 1945 September and October, C. Hamilton Ellis, “Royal Trains—V”, in Railway Magazine, page 249:
- As a result, while the train was being shunted at Bombay, the buffers became locked, producing a situation most intriguing for the onlookers, but exasperating for the exalted passengers and the unhappy railway authorities.
- Involving oneself in secret plots or schemes.
- 2011, Annelise Freisenbruch, Caesars' Wives: Sex, Power, and Politics in the Roman Empire:
- A book that does not sell us the powerful, intriguing women of Rome simply as poisoners, schemers, and femmes fatales […]
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- (archaic) Having clandestine or illicit intercourse.
- 1839, Michael Ryan, Prostitution in London, page 83:
- […] few respectable women will now sit at a window, looking into the public street, or gaze at passengers in any large town or city; and no one does so at present, unless an innocent inexperienced, husband-hunting, flirtish, or intriguing person.
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Synonyms
Translations
causing a desire to know more
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Noun
intriguing (plural intriguings)
- (dated) An intrigue.
- 1909, Thomas Longueville, The Curious Case of Lady Purbeck:
- In all these negotiations, and caballings, and intriguings, the person most concerned, Frances Coke, the beauty and the heiress, was only the ball in the game.
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