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persuasive
/ pəˈsweɪsɪv /
adjective
having the power or ability to persuade; tending to persuade
a persuasive salesman
Other Word Forms
- persuasively adverb
- persuasiveness noun
- nonpersuasive adjective
- nonpersuasively adverb
- nonpersuasiveness noun
- prepersuasive adjective
- unpersuasive adjective
- unpersuasively adverb
- unpersuasiveness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of persuasive1
Example Sentences
Rhythmically mesmerizing and harmonically alluring, Minimalism proved the most persuasive new musical method of the late 20th century.
But instead, the judge said, she had been "composed enough to tell persuasive and cohesive lies about what had happened".
Mr Coad said Cardi B may well have been encouraged by her lawyers to use "all of her charm and persuasive power" in the witness box.
Condon sought someone who could be persuasive within the gritty realism of a prison movie, while also credibly being a larger-than-life Hollywood musical star.
Stephen tucked in a couple of bread-and-butter pickles for good measure, a kind of weeknight Cuban, improvised but persuasive.
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