/ʌtɹæˈktɪvnʌs/ - [utraktivnus] - at•trac•tive•ness
We found 6 definitions of attractiveness from 4 different sources.
NounPlural: attractivenesses |
||
attractiveness - sexual allure | ||
unattractiveness an ugliness of appearance that is not appealing to viewers | ||
attractive pleasing to the eye or mind especially through beauty or charm; "a remarkably attractive young man"; "an attractive personality"; "attractive clothes"; "a book with attractive illustrations" | ||
unattractive lacking beauty or charm; "as unattractive as most mining regions" | ||
beauty the qualities that give pleasure to the senses | ||
adorability, adorableness extreme attractiveness | ||
animal magnetism, bewitchery, beguilement magnetic personal charm | ||
charisma, personal appeal, personal magnetism a personal attractiveness or interestingness that enables you to influence others | ||
sex appeal, desirability, desirableness, oomph attractiveness to the opposite sex | ||
appealingness, appeal, charm (law) a legal proceeding in which the appellant resorts to a higher court for the purpose of obtaining a review of a lower court decision and a reversal of the lower court's judgment or the granting of a new trial; "their appeal was denied in the superior court" | ||
attractiveness - the quality of arousing interest; being attractive or something that attracts; "her personality held a strange attraction for him" | ||
attraction | ||
quality an essential and distinguishing attribute of something or someone; "the quality of mercy is not strained"--Shakespeare | ||
affinity a natural attraction or feeling of kinship; "an affinity for politics"; "the mysterious affinity between them"; "James's affinity with Sam" | ||
allure, temptingness, allurement the power to entice or attract through personal charm | ||
binding the protective covering on the front, back, and spine of a book; "the book had a leather binding" | ||
drawing power the capacity for attracting people (customers or supporters) | ||
fascination the capacity to attract intense interest; "he held the children spellbound with magic tricks and other fascinations" | ||
come-on, enticement, lure the act of influencing by exciting hope or desire; "his enticements were shameless" | ||
sexual attraction attractiveness on the basis of sexual desire |