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美:[pə'sweɪdə]
英:[pə'sweɪdə]
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复数:persuaders
Latin persuadēre, from per- thoroughly + suadēre to advise, urge — more at sweet
The first known use of persuade was in the 15th century
persuasiveadjective
tending to persuade
a persuasive argument
persuasionnoun
the act of persuading
the power or ability to persuade
the state of being persuaded
a way of believingespecially: a system of religious beliefs
a group having the same religious beliefs
persuasibleadjective
capable of being persuaded
persuadeverb
to win over to a belief or to a course of action by argument or earnest request
persuadeverb
to win over to a belief or to a course of action by argument or earnest request
1 The rule putatively updates the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act of 1959, which requires “persuaders” hired by employers to communicate directly with workers to disclose their clients, services and compensation.
2 I’d scorned these types when I’d first moved to the beach, but physical beauty is a great persuader, and misery soon grows tired of its own company.
3 Nicknamed the “quiet persuader,” Cochran was known much more for his diligent work in committee rooms than for cable news appearances.
4 But Djokovic’s current form and evident appetite for more victories are great persuaders.
5 That is, trust me, a bitter pill for someone who has spent more than 40 years as a professional persuader.
6 If the Constitution’s system of checks and balances requires a President who is, above all else, a persuader, then Trump is failing.
7 Weinberg is a world-class persuader, though, and a majority of the trustees and a surprising number of benefactors and city officials fell in love with Hammons’s ghost pier.
8 And Republicans, who have been struggling to energize their voters, now get a powerful persuader.
9 But I see desperation among so-called hidden persuaders, not vast control.
10 Here is the prime minister's dilemma: for the "stay" side to win, they need David Cameron to become the great persuader.
11 This has rarely applied since most attorney-employer communications weren’t deemed persuader activities.
12 The fear of being on the wrong side of history is a strong persuader, and it was clearly behind much of the reaction to the news that the BBC had slapped down Murray.
13 Merely drafting employment policies could be a persuader activity.
14 The beneficiaries will be unions, which don’t have to report their own persuader activities.
15 She couldn't be persuaded to go.
16 The courts and Congress have a constitutional duty to rein in the president's overreach by overturning the persuader rule.
17 “They are so cute!” recalled Valcarce, toggling between Spanish and English, every bit the pert persuader with a flower tucked behind her ear.
18 But some of the smartest persuaders in this book, including AOC, combine standing in your truth and moral commitment and reaching out.
19 Also rescinded was the "persuader rule," which required law firms to publicly disclose any work they do for employers trying to fight against union organization efforts.
20 Some books on salesmanship recommend that persuaders try to mirror the posture or talking styles of their clients in order to establish rapport.