lure - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

From Anglo-Norman lure, from Old French loirre (Modern French leurre), from Frankish *lōþr, from Proto-Germanic *lōþr-, perhaps ultimately related to *laþō (“invitation, calling”), or from Proto-Indo-European *leh₂- (“to hide”). Compare English allure, also from Old French. Probably related to German Luder (“bait”).
- (Received Pronunciation)
- (yod-dropping)
- (without the pour–poor merger) IPA(key): /lʊə/
- (pour–poor merger) IPA(key): /lɔː/
- (without yod-dropping)
- IPA(key): /lɜː/
- (yod-dropping)
- (General American) IPA(key): /lʊəɹ/, /lɝ/
- (Scotland) IPA(key): /lʉːɹ/
- Homophones: lore (some speakers with the pour–poor merger); law (non-rhotic, pour–poor merger)
- Rhymes: -ʊə(ɹ), -ɔː(ɹ), -ɜː(ɹ)
lure (plural lures)
- (also figurative) Something that tempts or attracts, especially one with a promise of reward or pleasure.
- (fishing) An artificial bait attached to a fishing line to attract fish.
- (falconry) A bunch of feathers attached to a line, used in falconry to recall the hawk.
c. 1590–1592 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Taming of the Shrew”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act IV, scene i], page 222:
My Faulcon now is ſharpe and paſſing emptie, / And til ſhe ſtoope ſhe muſt not be full gorg'd, / For then ſhe never lookes upon her lure.
- A velvet smoothing brush.[1]
tempting or attractive object
- Bulgarian: примамка (bg) f (primamka)
- Catalan: esquer (ca) m, esca (ca) f
- Czech: lákadlo (cs) n, vějička f
- Danish: lokkemiddel n, lokkemad c
- Dutch: lokmiddel (nl) n, (informally) lokkertje (nl) n
- Finnish: houkutin (fi)
- French: attrait (fr) m
- Friulian: lescje f
- Galician: cebo (gl) m, abeto (gl) m, isca (gl) f
- German: Anlockungsmittel n, Lockmittel (de) n, Lockung f, Lockvogel (de) m, Lure f, Reiz (de) m
- Italian: esca (it) f, richiamo (it) m
- Latin: illecebra f
- Naga:
- Khiamniungan Naga: tāi
- Polish: pokusa (pl) f, ponęta f, mamidło n
- Russian: прима́нка (ru) f (primánka)
- Spanish: cebo (es) m, curricán m, aliciente (es) m
- Telugu: గాలము (te) (gālamu)
- Turkish: câzibe, çığırtkan (tr)
- Yiddish: מאַניעניש n (manyenish)
artificial fishing bait
- Catalan: esquer (ca) m, esca (ca) f
- Czech: návnada f, třpytka f
- Danish: blink n or c
- Finnish: viehe (fi), uistin (fi)
- French: leurre (fr) m
- Friulian: lescje f
- Galician: anzol (gl) m
- German: Köder (de) m
- Italian: esca (it) f
- Māori: poa, poapoa
- Norwegian: agn (no) n
- Polish: wabik (pl) m, błysk (pl) m, błystka f, błyszcz m, błyszczka f, błyszczyk (pl) m
- Portuguese: isca (pt)
- Russian: блесна́ (ru) f (blesná)
- Spanish: cebo (es) m
- Swedish: agn (sv) n, bete (sv) n
- Telugu: ఎర (te) (era)
- Turkish: yem (tr), zoka (tr)
- Yiddish: מאַניעניש n (manyenish)
falconry
- Turkish:
- Ottoman Turkish: رات (rat)
lure (third-person singular simple present lures, present participle luring, simple past and past participle lured)
- (transitive) To attract by temptation, appeal, or guile.
- Synonym: entice
2012, Kate Bassett, “Mid-Seventies Onwards: Operatic beginnings and The Body in Question”, in In Two Minds: A Biography of Jonathan Miller, London: Oberon Books Ltd, →ISBN, page 219:
It had been sixteen years since the BBC’s Grace Wyndham Goldie wrote her internal memo about luring him back to make sociological/scientific TV programmes. Now a second note had circulated, from the science department, proposing that he should present the Corporation’s next educative megaseries.
2014, Michel Clasquin-Johnson, What is the difference between a research professor and a professor?:
Professor is what you become after teaching for twenty to thirty years. Research Professor is what you then want to become, so you can finally stop worrying about students and do the research that lured you into academia in the first place!
- (transitive) To attract fish with a lure.
- (transitive, falconry) To recall a hawk with a lure.
to entice
- Bulgarian: примамвам (bg) (primamvam), съблазнявам (bg) (sǎblaznjavam)
- Chinese:
- Danish: lokke
- Dutch: aantrekken (nl), lokken (nl)
- Esperanto: logi
- Finnish: houkutella (fi), vedättää (fi)
- French: attirer (fr) (dans un piège), séduire (fr), leurrer (fr)
- Galician: atricar, tentar (gl)
- German: anlocken (de), herlocken, locken (de), ködern (de)
- Old High German: spanan
- Greek:
- Ancient Greek: δελεάζω (deleázō)
- Ingrian: manitella
- Italian: sedurre (it), incantare (it), ammaliare (it), tentare (it), adescare (it)
- Japanese: 誘惑する (ja) (ゆうわくする, yūwaku suru), 誘い出す (ja) (さそいだす, sasoidasu) (away, out), 誘い込む (さそいこむ, sasoikomu) (in, into)
- Macedonian: при́мами (prímami)
- Māori: kohinu, poapoa, tīmori, whakapoapoa, pātoi
- Middle English: snaren, snarlen
- Polish: nęcić (pl) impf, wabić (pl) impf, mamić (pl) impf
- Portuguese: atrair (pt)
- Russian: соблазня́ть (ru) impf (soblaznjátʹ), прима́нивать (ru) impf (primánivatʹ), мани́ть (ru) impf (manítʹ), завлека́ть (ru) impf (zavlekátʹ)
- Spanish: seducir (es), encantar (es), atraer (es)
- Swedish: locka (sv)
- Telugu: ఊరించు (te) (ūriñcu)
- Thai: ล่อ (th) (lɔ̂ɔ)
- Turkish: aklını çelmek (tr), ayartmak (tr), cezbetmek (tr), çekmek (tr), kandırmak (tr), yemlemek (tr)
Translations to be checked
lure (plural lures)
- ^ Edward H[enry] Knight (1877), “Lure”, in Knight’s American Mechanical Dictionary. […], volumes II (GAS–REA), New York, N.Y.: Hurd and Houghton […], →OCLC.
lure
From Middle Low German luren.
lure (imperative lur, present tense lurer, passive lures, simple past lurte, past participle lurt, present participle lurende)
- “lure” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
lure
lure (present tense lurar or lurer, past tense lura or lurte, past participle lura or lurt, present participle lurande, imperative lur)
- alternative form of lura
From Frankish *lōþr, from Proto-Germanic *lōþr-, perhaps ultimately related to *laþō (“invitation, calling”), or from Proto-Indo-European *leh₂- (“to hide”).
lure oblique singular, f (oblique plural lures, nominative singular lure, nominative plural lures)
- lure (bunch of feathers attached to a line, used in falconry to recall the hawk)
- English: lure
- lure on the Anglo-Norman On-Line Hub
- “lure”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
- Friedrich Kluge (1883), “Luder”, in John Francis Davis, transl., Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, published 1891