Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    persuadable
    /pəˈsweɪdəbl/

    adjective

    • 1. easily persuaded; amenable: "they need to identify the most persuadable voters"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. If someone is persuadable, it is possible to make them do or believe something by giving them a good reason to do it, or by talking to them and making them believe it: After a cup of coffee and a slice of cake , she became more persuadable.

  3. : capable of being persuaded. Examples of persuadable in a Sentence. Recent Examples on the Web Former President Trump is adjusting his agenda, the GOP platform, his vice-presidential plans — even his debate style — to win over more than a half-dozen persuadable voter groups in seven states, advisers tell us.

  4. If someone is persuadable, it is possible to make them do or believe something by giving them a good reason to do it, or by talking to them and making them believe it: After a cup of coffee and a slice of cake , she became more persuadable.

  5. Synonyms for PERSUADABLE: impressionable, unsophisticated, malleable, inexperienced, childlike, naïve, simpleminded, sincere; Antonyms of PERSUADABLE: critical, skeptical, cynical, insensitive, suspicious, wary, mistrustful, sophisticated.

  6. Jul 20, 2024 · persuadable. adjective. being susceptible to persuasion. synonyms: convincible, persuasible, suasible. susceptible. (often followed by `of' or `to') yielding readily to or capable of.

  7. adjective. These are words and phrases related to persuadable. Click on any word or phrase to go to its thesaurus page. Or, go to the definition of persuadable. AMENABLE. Synonyms. favorably disposed. cordial. tractable. open-minded. acquiescent. willing. obliging. complaisant. sympathetic. yielding. submissive. amenable. agreeable.

  8. To cause (someone) to accept a point of view or to undertake a course of action by means of argument, reasoning, or entreaty: "to make children fit to live in a society by persuading them to learn and accept its codes" (Alan W. Watts). See Usage Note at convince. [Latin persuādēre : per-, per- + suādēre, to urge; see swād- in Indo-European roots .]