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persuade
[per-sweyd]
verb (used with object)
to prevail on (a person) to do something, as by advising or urging.
We could not persuade him to wait.
Antonyms: dissuadeto induce to believe by appealing to reason or understanding; convince.
to persuade the judge of the prisoner's innocence.
persuade
/ pəˈsweɪd /
verb
to induce, urge, or prevail upon successfully
he finally persuaded them to buy it
to cause to believe; convince
even with the evidence, the police were not persuaded
Usage
Other Word Forms
- persuadable adjective
- persuadability noun
- persuader noun
- persuadableness noun
- persuadably adverb
- persuadingly adverb
- nonpersuadable adjective
- prepersuade verb (used with object)
- unpersuadable adjective
- unpersuadably adverb
- unpersuaded adjective
- well-persuaded adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of persuade1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Even the kinder ones who persuade her and Andy to join them on a scavenging run to what looks like an abandoned space station treat him as expendable.
At the same time, voters might drift away if the country's prospects improve under Labour or if Badenoch can persuade them that she and her party have better solutions than Farage.
Ned’s mission is to persuade enough people around him to join him in paying attention.
"It's really convenient. It's one of the things that persuades me to have coffee here," she says.
Following the incident, he said he eventually persuaded Ellis to get on the elevator and leave the floor.
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