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Persuade   /pərswˈeɪd/   Listen
Persuade

verb
(past & past part. persuaded; pres. part. persuading)
1.
Win approval or support for.  Synonyms: carry, sway.  "His speech did not sway the voters"
2.
Cause somebody to adopt a certain position, belief, or course of action; twist somebody's arm.  Antonym: dissuade.



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"Persuade" Quotes from Famous Books



... crushing sense, at the conclusion of one of these interviews, of having been put down as a tiresome and heavy young man. I fully believed in my own liveliness and sprightliness, but it seemed an impossible task to persuade my elders that these qualities were there. A good-natured, elderly friend used at times to rally me upon my shyness, and say that it all came from thinking too much about myself. It was as useless as if ...
— From a College Window • Arthur Christopher Benson

... given some command in French to Morin; to Courthope she spoke again in hasty sentences, reiterating the evidence against him. Her manner was a little different now—it had not the same straightforward air of command. He began to hope that he might persuade her, and then discovered suddenly that she had been deliberately riveting his attention while the command which he had not understood was being obeyed. A noose of rope was thrown round his arms and instantly tightened; with a nimbleness which he had not expected Morin knotted it fast. ...
— A Dozen Ways Of Love • Lily Dougall

... in the ostracism which in the past they exercised as employers of labour, whether agricultural or industrial, which, besides its direct effect of breeding and perpetuating sectarian hate, served in an economic sense to unfit Catholics for employment, and to persuade those who in fact were least unfitted and retained their perceptive faculties, that the scope for their energies was to be found only abroad, and so tended to leave behind a residue of labourers rendered unfit ...
— Ireland and the Home Rule Movement • Michael F. J. McDonnell

... was again banished from her father's sorrow. Ah! her desire now was not to find him happy, but to be allowed to share his sorrows; not to force him to be sociable, but to persuade ...
— The Warden • Anthony Trollope

... nice, Gregory!" she said. "You and Captain Ashton know each other, don't you. No, I couldn't persuade Oliver to come; he wouldn't give up his whist. Isn't Oliver dreadful; he moves from the saddle to the whist-table, and back again; and that is all. Captain Ashton and I have been comparing notes; we find that we have missed hardly any of Madame Okraska's concerts in London. ...
— Tante • Anne Douglas Sedgwick


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