Infatuating

/ɪnˈfætʃu.eɪ.tɪŋ/

मोहक; दिल मोह लेने वाला; सम्मोहक

Origin & History

From the verb infatuate (17th century), from Late Latin infatuatus ‘made foolish’, from Latin in- ‘in’ + fatuus ‘foolish’.

यह infatuate क्रिया (17वीं सदी) से बना है, जो Late Latin infatuatus ‘मूर्ख बना दिया गया’ से आया; Latin in- ‘अंदर/में’ + fatuus ‘मूर्ख/बेवकूफ़’।

Definition

Describes something or someone that strongly charms or captivates, often producing an intense, sometimes unreasoning attraction (infatuation).

किसी चीज़/व्यक्ति का इतना मोहक या आकर्षक होना कि वह किसी में तीव्र (कभी-कभी अविवेकपूर्ण) आकर्षण या मोह उत्पन्न कर दे।

Parts of Speech

Adjective:
She gave an infatuating smile that made everyone notice her.
उसने इतना मोहक मुस्कान दी कि सबका ध्यान उसी पर चला गया।

Usage Examples

The actor’s infatuating charm won over the audience within minutes.
He wrote about the infatuating beauty of the city at night.
Her infatuating voice made the advertisement memorable.
The perfume has an infatuating scent that lingers.

Related Forms

Adjective
Adverb
Infatuatingly

Idioms & Phrases

Be infatuated with (someone/something)
(किसी) के प्रति मोहग्रस्त/अत्यधिक आसक्त होना
An infatuating smile
एक मोहक मुस्कान
Infatuating charm
मोहक आकर्षण