If there is an innocence about Fos's entrancement with all that glitters, there is also something dark.
From the economist.com
She sings well, but without entrancement.
From the time.com
In the universality of its human concerns and its storytelling entrancement, any of Shakespeare's front-rank plays redeems the flaws of the players.
From the time.com
Cooke's Hazel has a sweet vulnerability and innocence that sort of explains Mr Berry's entrancement but his deceitfulness is rather repellent, for all his presumed innocence.
From the theaustralian.com.au
This book moves briskly from Louis Pasteur's entrancement with silkworms to the spread of cholera and the microbial insect parasite Wolbachia, to a wonderfully insightful time line of science.
From the newscientist.com
More examples
A feeling of delight at being filled with wonder and enchantment
The act of entrancing or the state of being entranced