Infatuate

/ɪnˈfætʃueɪt/ verb

To infatuate someone is to make them feel a strong but often foolish or short-lived love or admiration. It usually suggests that the feeling is not very deep or wise.

It comes from Latin “infatuare,” meaning “to make foolish” or “to make stupid,” from “fatuus” (foolish). The idea was that strong blind attraction makes a person act silly or unreasonable.

📖 Full word page — etymology, 47 translations, audio 🔑 Get Free API Key — 50 lookups/day 📚 Read the Docs — integrate Word Orb