Any enticement; that which invites by the prospect of advantage or pleasure; a decoy
means a spoon, plug, jig, fly or other such device made only of feathers, fibre, rubber, wood, metal, plastic or similar materials, that does not attract fish by scent or flavour
A contrivance somewhat resembling a bird, and often baited with raw meat; used by falconers in recalling hawks
To lure someone means to trick them into a particular place or to trick them into doing something that they should not do. He lured her to his home and shot her with his father's gun The company aims to lure smokers back to cigarettes. = entice
A roughly prey shaped item tied with a piece of meat and swung or dragged for a raptor to chase
{i} something which attracts, enticement; bait used to trap an animal or catch a fish; object of leather and feathers tied to a long line and used to attract a hawk (Falconry)
If your opponent has any Benched Pokémon, choose 1 and switch it with his or her active Pokémon Pokémon with this attack: Ninetales L38, Victreebel L42
A distinctive piece of white plastic, large enough for easy recognition, which is attached to the line and is drawn around the course in front of the hounds as a running teaser
provoke someone to do something through (often false or exaggerated) promises or persuasion; "He lured me into temptation"
A lure is an attractive quality that something has, or something that you find attractive. The excitement of hunting big game in Africa has been a lure to Europeans for 200 years The lure of rural life is proving as strong as ever
[ 'lur ] (noun.) 14th century. Anglo-Norman lure, from Old French loirre (Modern French leurre), from Frankish lothr, from Proto-Germanic *luoder. Compare English allure, from Old French.