persuade+not+to

  • 41talk out of — {v.} 1. To persuade not to; make agree or decide not to. Used with a verbal noun. * /Mary s mother talked her out of quitting school./ Contrast: TALK INTO. 2. To allow to go or get out by talking; let escape by talking. * /Johnny is good at… …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 42talk out of — {v.} 1. To persuade not to; make agree or decide not to. Used with a verbal noun. * /Mary s mother talked her out of quitting school./ Contrast: TALK INTO. 2. To allow to go or get out by talking; let escape by talking. * /Johnny is good at… …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 43talk\ out\ of — v 1. To persuade not to; make agree or decide not to. Used with a verbal noun. Mary s mother talked her out of quitting school. Contrast: talk into 2. To allow to go or get out by talking; let escape by talking. Johnny is good at talking his way… …

    Словарь американских идиом

  • 44dissuade — v. n. 1. Urge or exhort against, attempt to divert, urge not to. 2. Turn from a purpose, divert by persuasion, render averse, persuade not to …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 45dissuade — dissuadable, adj. dissuader, n. /di swayd /, v.t., dissuaded, dissuading. 1. to deter by advice or persuasion; persuade not to do something (often fol. by from): She dissuaded him from leaving home. 2. Archaic. to advise or urge against: to… …

    Universalium

  • 46picket — pick·et 1 n: a person posted by a labor organization at a place of employment affected by a labor dispute; broadly: a person posted for a demonstration or protest picket 2 vt: to post pickets in front of: walk or stand in front of as a picket… …

    Law dictionary

  • 47dissuade — v discourage, disincline, stop, hold in leash, harness, pull in, turn aside from, talk out of, persuade not to. See discourage …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 48dissuade — dis•suade [[t]dɪˈsweɪd[/t]] v. t. suad•ed, suad•ing 1) to deter by advice or persuasion; persuade not to do something (often fol. by from) 2) archaic to advise or urge against • Etymology: 1505–15; < L dissuādēre= dis I+suādēre to recommend,… …

    From formal English to slang

  • 49dissuade — /dɪˈsweɪd / (say di swayd) verb (t) (dissuaded, dissuading) 1. (sometimes followed by from) to deter by advice or persuasion; persuade not to do something: to dissuade him from leaving home. 2. to advise or urge against (an action, etc.). {Latin… …

  • 50dis|suade — «dih SWAYD», transitive verb, suad|ed, suad|ing. 1. to persuade not to do something: »The father finally dissuaded his son from leaving school. 2. to advise against. ╂[< Latin dissuādēre < dis from, away + suādēre to urge] …

    Useful english dictionary