Ways in or doors through which you enter a place; also means to fill someone with wonder or enchantment.
From Old French 'entrer,' from Latin 'intrare' meaning 'to go in.' The 'en-' prefix means 'into.' The enchantment sense comes from 'entrance' as a trance-like state of wonder.
English's greatest ambiguity: the same word spelled identically but pronounced differently has opposite meanings—you enter through an entrance, but you might be entrance-ed (enchanted) by something at the entrance!
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