From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishseductressse‧duc‧tress /sɪˈdʌktrɪs/ noun [countable] a woman who persuades someone to have sex with her → seducer
Examples from the Corpus
seductress• They look for femmefatale, a Mata Hari of world finance, a seductress.• Dorothy Dandridge played Carmen, here a seductress who works in a parachute factory.• He has some idea of me as a cheating seductress out to get his brother.• Whitaker and Givens give the proceedings a much needed lift and the latter shows promise and the conniving seductress.• Enter Theresa Russell, a sultry, sloe-eyed seductress with a problem of her own.• Women felt they were being asked to fulfil two contradictory roles, that of the homemaker and the seductress, simultaneously.• One problem: Both the wife and the seductress are the same woman, Patricia Arquette.