Word
Of
The
Day
blandishment
blandishment \BLAN-dish-munt\
noun
Blandishments are nice things that you say or do to convince someone to do something.
Blandishment is usually used in the plural form.
// Despite the many
blandishments of the dressing room attendant, we were resolved not to overspend at the fashion boutique.
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Examples:
“… he sought to turn the attack around by saying his vast wealth—which has allowed him to richly fund his political endeavors—made him immune to the
blandishments of plutocrats and corporate interests.” — Mark Z. Barabak,
The Los Angeles Times, 23 Feb. 2026
Did you know?
When
Star Wars audiences first meet former smuggler Lando Calrissian—played iconically by Billy Dee Williams—in
The Empire Strikes Back, he is full of blandishments, offering flattery (telling Leia “You truly belong here with us among the clouds”) and gifts to our heroes in the form of food and drink (“Will you join me for a little refreshment?”) in order to entice them into what we soon discover is a trap. Notably, before the whole sordid deal goes down (and before Lando’s eventual redemption), Han Solo calls him “an old
smoothie.” Lando’s verbal smoothness can be linked to
blandishment too: the word was formed from the verb
blandish, meaning “to
coax with flattery.”
Blandish ultimately comes from the Latin adjective
blandus, meaning “influencing others by flattery,” source too of our adjective
bland, which typically describes things boring and flavorless but which can also mean “smooth and soothing in manner or quality”—a meaning that also applies to everyone’s favorite Cloud City administrator.