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persuasion
[ per-swey-zhuhn ]
noun
- the act of persuading or seeking to persuade.
- the power of persuading; persuasive force.
- the state or fact of being persuaded or convinced.
- a deep conviction or belief.
- a form or system of belief, especially religious belief:
the Quaker persuasion.
- a sect, group, or faction holding or advocating a particular belief, idea, ideology, etc.:
Several of the people present are of the socialist persuasion.
- Facetious. kind or sort.
persuasion
/ pəˈsweɪʒən /
noun
- the act of persuading or of trying to persuade
- the power to persuade
- the state of being persuaded; strong belief
- an established creed or belief, esp a religious one
- a sect, party, or faction
Other Words From
- preper·suasion noun
- self-per·suasion noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of persuasion1
Word History and Origins
Origin of persuasion1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
But Hollande was “insistent,” she writes, and “his strength of persuasion was nuclear.”
Further, creating models for persuasion is “incredibly hard.”
My mom stands there, unimpressed by my attempt at persuasion.
You might be surprised to hear that hidden in Tampa, Florida is a food oasis of the Cuban persuasion.
Let us, through persuasion and education, seek to improve institutions we deem defective.
After an hour's insane remonstrance, he gave in to his own alarm, rather than to the persuasion of his partner.
A year later I found Agoncillo of exactly the same intransigent persuasion.
It also legalised peaceful picketing, that particular form of persuasion with which a democratic age has become only too familiar.
We leave Pernambuco, with a firm persuasion that this part of Brazil at least will never again tamely submit to Portugal.
At his persuasion the pope purchased the vineyard, and the archological commission began the work of excavation.
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