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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a lure to" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing something that attracts or entices someone towards a particular action or place.
Example: "The bright lights of the city served as a lure to tourists seeking adventure."
Alternatives: "an attraction for" or "a temptation for".
Exact(57)
But there is a lure to skirting the rules.
Its bountiful cash is a lure to young men living in poverty in the desert.
Now, they are increasingly an obsession: a lure to bidders and a lubricant for bids.
But "Orange" uses that premise as a lure to get us to listen to other voices.
The law also bans most tobacco flavorings, which are considered a lure to first-time smokers.
I had used a lure to get my 15-year-old boy to this point.
Readers are promised bulkier papers as a lure to continue buying.
The waterfront parks are to serve first as a lure to developers and then to potential tenants.
Those remarks, made at a news conference in Beijing, were seen as a lure to elicit China's cooperation.
But it is also a lure to keep continuity among Beamer's coaching staff in tiny Blacksburg, Va.
The Internet and interactive television possibilities were a lure to Microsoft, which backed Comcast in the deal.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com