0 to persuade someone gently to do something or go somewhere, by being kind and patient, or by appearing to be:
1 to try to persuade someone to do something by gently asking or patiently encouraging the person:
He’ll talk if you coax him.
Officers helped coax him down from the roof with the assistance of center staff.
He has coaxed law enforcement agencies into agreeing to the new protocol.
Researchers have coaxed cloned rhesus macaque embryos to grow to the blastocyst stage.
Maintaining a proper alkalinity plus frequent wetting and drying cycles can coax soil to retain more carbon dioxide.
They were in no way coaxed by the military.
Where the moderates coaxed, appeased and conciliated, the radicals preferred to cajole, to threaten and to force.
Here we concentrated on whether the infant could be coaxed into giving the spatula to the stranger, and simply rated whether this occurred.
This means that if central guidelines are to be implemented, lower levels of government must be coaxed or forced to comply.
中文繁体
哄勸, 哄騙, 勸誘…
More中文简体
哄劝, 哄骗, 劝诱…
MoreEspañol
convencer, persuadir…
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persuadir…
MoreTürk dili
güzellikle inandırmak, güzellikle ikna etmek, gönlünü yapmak…
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amadouer…
MoreČeština
přemluvit, vyškemrat…
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lokke, liste…
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