To amuse (someone); said especially of a professional entertainer. (verb)
Entertainment. (noun)
Examples of word entertain
By and large, the only “something” that other countries might entertain is the capacity to shovel the S#!
Anyone who has to use profanity to make their point or to entertain is only revealing his or her own limitations. — ravenswing2
If there was ever of picture of a total stalemate, that it is, but the one thing the MSM does not want to entertain is any suggestion that the Qana incident was staged by Hezbollah.
Now, Wired News reports that the BBC, which operates under a royal charter to inform, educate, and entertain, is launching “iCan,” a service to support citizen activism.
They can't be content just to be caretakers, especially not when a waning sport needs competitors whose desire to entertain is eclipsed only by their desire to win.
But when he plays them, he should do so with the bogey-and-wave crowd, with the aging champs here to entertain from the deep end of the traps.
Unlike with many street performers, I do not have to place quotes around the word entertain, because they're actually pretty funny.
It's a narrative art that strives not to change or enlighten or broaden or reorient -- not necessarily even to "entertain" -- but merely and always to engage, to appeal to.
It's a narrative art that strives not to change or enlighten or broaden or reorient--not necessarily even to "entertain"--but merely and always to engage, to appeal to.