ATTRACTION


Meaning of ATTRACTION in English

ə.ˈtrakshən noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle French & Medieval Latin; Middle French, attraction, contraction, from Medieval Latin attraction-, attractio attraction, from Latin, contraction, from attractus (past participle of attrahere to attract, contract) + -ion-, -io -ion

1.

a. : a characteristic that elicits interest or admiration : an attracting quality — usually used in plural

relationships between individual members are based primarily on spontaneous mutual attractions — Journal of Communication

b. : personal magnetic charm

unable to resist her mysterious attractions

2. : a force acting between oppositely electrified bodies or oppositely magnetized bodies that tends to draw them together and resist their separation

3.

a. : the action or power of drawing forth a response (as interest or affection) : attractive quality

the career of the father came to have an attraction for the son

b.

(1) : something that draws people by appealing to their desires and tastes

(2) : a person, thing, or performance that attracts crowds

another $100 dinner, with the presidential candidate as the main attraction

4. : grammatical agreement between two words usually near each other that are not syntactically connected in a way that makes it normal for them to agree (as between books and were in “neither of the books were sold”)

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.