0 to persuade someone to do something in a clever and dishonest way, when they do not want to do it:
1 to persuade someone to do something the person may not want to do:
Nevertheless, even taking these points into consideration, we are persuaded that people had a tendency to initiate lawsuits on the spur of the moment, especially when inveigled to do so.
The ability of political hostesses to ' inveigle ' potential supporters was crucial to the opposition during their long period in the political wilderness in the late eighteenth century.
We must not allow ourselves to be browbeaten, inveigled or hammered into giving up and letting others produce what we should produce ourselves.
There is no sort of respectability about the people who are inveigled into this place to work.
The seduction was—it could have been nothing less—a calculated, deliberate plan conceived by an inveterate paederast to inveigle this child into becoming his established catamite.
There is no suggestion that they were inveigled into carrying out an operation which they would regard as unattractive.
By bringing an offender into contact with other criminals he is inveigled into and rehearsed into a life of crime.
This is a delicious but not unimportant excursion into which he has inveigled us.