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to entertaining
verb
To amuse (someone); to engage the attention of agreeably.
Exact(60)
We are used to entertaining the fans.
Not that he is any stranger to entertaining youngsters musically.
Mind you, Raven is no stranger to entertaining.
(She should have married Thoreau, whose secret to entertaining was never to mention "dinner").
But there's nothing new in royal associates knocking out guides to entertaining.
The garden boy, an elf with eyes of burnt umber, had taken to entertaining him with tricks.
Patricia Highsmith liked readers, however, young ones included, and devoted a 50-year-long writing career to entertaining them.
Bay is Hollywood's biggest alpha-bull; this time he gallops through the china shop to entertaining effect.
Like Carol Channing and Liza Minnelli she epitomizes traditional show business brass and resilience: a "give it all you've got" dedication to entertaining.
Bernice and Morty had a strong partnership whether in support of Flagstaff Liquors' success or to entertaining at their beautiful house on the beach in Deal.
When football clubs become businesses, players become commodities, and fans become customers, chairmen only commit to selling a brand – not to entertaining us.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com