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persuader

[ UK /pəswˈe‍ɪdɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone who tries to persuade or induce or lead on

How To Use persuader In A Sentence

  • “Au reste, je ne puis pas me persuader qu’il y ait des tubercules au poumon, parce que j’ai ne jamais crache de pus, ni autre chose que de la pituite qui a beaucoup de ressemblance au blanc des oeufs. Travels through France and Italy
  • In other words, the largest and most powerful farming organisation in the country has not just cleared the way for the proposed superhighways, it has committed itself to becoming persuaders to the motorway template.
  • He makes them obey not by pleading, which they ignore, and not by hitting them, which merely makes them more stubborn, but by what he calls his mule persuader. Centennial
  • The persuader is a short, heavy bludgeon with a nail-studded head. A Yankee in the Trenches
  • Instead of using their powerful voice inside the system as persuaders for change, they were choosing exit.
  • The new leader must be a charismatic persuader, someone to whom others can relate, a person who can set sights higher than the next quarter's earnings report.
  • It was an ancient practice to break a prisoner and force them to spill any knowledge they might have, starvation was a very powerful persuader.
  • She was a persuader and ‘sold’ her ideas to educators and parents alike.
  • With tactics such as definition, cultural persuaders create knowledge and effectuate control over that which they describe.
  • Here are three techniques of top performers that you can use in your own workplace interactions to be more persuasive and influential by Monday morning: 1. Lose your attachments: We tend to think of great persuaders as silver-tongued devils who manipulate others. Lisa Earle McLeod: How to Be More Persuasive and Influential at Work
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