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  2. The meaning of DISSUADE is to advise (a person) against something. How to use dissuade in a sentence.

  3. Synonym. deter. Opposite. persuade. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. to persuade someone to do something. persuade If she doesn't want to do it, nothing you say will persuade her. convince The lawyer convinced the jury of the man's innocence. talk someone into She managed to talk me into going along.

  4. If you dissuade someone from doing or believing something, you persuade them not to do or believe it. [ formal ] Doctors had tried to dissuade patients from smoking.

  5. Oct 21, 2017 · dissuade somebody (from something/from doing something) to persuade somebody not to do something. I tried to dissuade him from giving up his job. They were going to set off in the fog, but were dissuaded. She made no attempt to dissuade him. Topics Discussion and agreement c2

  6. dissuade. verb [ T ] uk / dɪˈsweɪd / us. Add to word list. to persuade someone not to do something: [ + from + doing sth ] We tried to dissuade him from leaving. (Definition of dissuade from the Cambridge Learner's Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

  7. dis•suade (di swād′), v.t., -suad•ed, -suad•ing. to deter by advice or persuasion; persuade not to do something (often fol. by from): She dissuaded him from leaving home. [Archaic.]to advise or urge against: to dissuade an action.

  8. When you dissuade someone, you convince that person not to do something: “When Caroline saw Peter's broken leg, she tried to dissuade him from going on the ski trip.” Remember the meaning of dissuade by comparing it to its more common relative persuade.

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