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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 Word Forms
- prepersuasion noun
- self-persuasion noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of persuasion1
Word History and Origins
Origin of persuasion1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
I know that many people of all political persuasions admire that someone as talented as you is the living embodiment of social mobility.
Politics and persuasion — on a shrinking map, and in difficult electoral environments like Iowa and Arizona — is the only option.
Among people of all political persuasions, there is a sense that, somewhere, somehow, things have taken a wrong turn.
Soft power is the ability to “obtain the outcomes one wants through attraction and persuasion rather than coercion and payment” — through means, that is, other than bullets, bullying and bribery.
Israelis of all political persuasions were horrified by recent videos posted by their captors showing two badly emaciated young men in tunnels under Gaza.
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