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lures

n. (plural of lure English)

WordNet
lures

See lur

Usage examples of "lures".

With a roar of engines, the Beaters departed to take up their positions, followed by the Lures, on their nippy dirt bikes that looked all too flimsy for the work they must do.

The peripheral support personnel - Sighters, Beaters, Lures, Wranglers and first aid crews - as important as the teams who herded the snakes along the way, were all accounted.

He knew that Dane believed the woman to be virtuous, intelligent, warm, loving, kind, and all the other lies and lures females used to attract gullible males.

Each hot movement announced that in Tahiti, dance was an erotic ritual where both partners displayed their physical lures to a potential mate—strength, stamina, grace, and an elemental sensuality that was literally breathtaking to watch.

If she had been a different kind of woman, or if she had known the rules and lures of the game, he would have taken her without hesitation.

She was worried, uncertain, almost frightened, yet she could no more refuse his sensual lures than the trout could refuse the intimacy of the caressing currents.

One was full of books, a spyglass, small boxes of fishing lures, the segments of her split bamboo fly rod, a packet of embroidery needles and floss, and other items.

The rods curved like whips against the clean sky, bent by the combined weight of lures and sea.

Once she had discovered that lures came in weights from a quarter of an ounce to sixteen ounces and up, she had gone right to the heavy stuff.

Real fishing instead of just dragging lures through the water no matter what the time or tide.

Take two of the Lures with you, and drop them at the vulnerable points we discussed.

The Lures, mounted on dirt bikes, were trained in their function - to attract renegade snakes of any size and "lure' them back to the main drive.

Film was unthinkable for a bass show because you might go two or three days shooting nothing but men casting their lures and spitting tobacco, but no fish.

Some of the lures were cracked or faded, the hooks bent and rusted, but each represented a special memory of a day on the water with Bobby Clinch.

The sales reps had given Dickie Lockhart four bags of assorted lures and hooks, plus a thousand dollars cash as incentive to win the tournament using the company's equipment.