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4.05
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charming adjective [ ˈtʃɑːmɪŋ ]

• very pleasant or attractive.
• "a charming country cottage"
Similar: delightful, pleasing, pleasant, agreeable, likeable, endearing, lovely, lovable, adorable, cute, sweet, appealing, attractive, good-looking, prepossessing, striking, alluring, delectable, ravishing, winning, winsome, fetching, captivating, engaging, enchanting, entrancing, fascinating, bewitching, beguiling, spellbinding, hypnotizing, mesmerizing, seductive, desirable, tempting, inviting, irresistible, dreamy, heavenly, divine, adorbs, gorgeous, smashing, easy on the eye, as nice as pie, babelicious, bodacious, on fleek, taking, beauteous, fair, comely,
Opposite: repulsive,

charming exclamation

• used as an ironic expression of displeasure or disapproval.
• "‘I hate men.’ ‘Charming!’ he said"

charm verb

• delight greatly.
• "the books have charmed children the world over"
Similar: delight, please, win, win over, appeal to, attract, captivate, allure, lure, draw, dazzle, fascinate, bewitch, beguile, enchant, enthral, enrapture, enamour, seduce, ravish, hypnotize, mesmerize, spellbind, transfix, rivet, grip, rapture,
Opposite: repel,
• control or achieve by or as if by magic.
• "a gesticulating figure endeavouring to charm a cobra"
Origin: Middle English (in the senses ‘incantation or magic spell’ and ‘to use spells’): from Old French charme (noun), charmer (verb), from Latin carmen ‘song, verse, incantation’.


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