inveigle - meaning and definition. What is inveigle
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What (who) is inveigle - definition

UMBRELLA TERM OF INFLUENCE AND MODE OF COMMUNICATION
Persuade; Persuasive; Social Psychology Persuasion; Inveigle; Inveigles; Inveigled; Inveigling; Persuades; Persuaded; Persuading; Persuasive communication; Systematic persuasion; Heuristic persuasion; Social persuasion
  • Persuasion]]'', novel by [[Jane Austen]], illustrated by [[C. E. Brock]]. For Sir Walter Elliot, baronet, the hints of Mr Shepherd, his agent, were quite unwelcome...
  • ''<nowiki/>'The art of persuasion'— returning from a ball in India'' from "The Graphic", 1890.

inveigle         
(inveigles, inveigling, inveigled)
If you inveigle someone into doing something, you cleverly persuade them to do it when they do not really want to. (FORMAL)
She inveigles Paco into a plot to swindle Tania out of her savings.
= cajole
VERB: V n into n/-ing
Inveigle         
·vt To lead astray as if blind; to persuade to something evil by deceptive arts or flattery; to Entice; to Insnare; to Seduce; to Wheedle.
inveigle         
v. (d; tr.) to inveigle into; out of (to inveigle smb. into doing smt.)

Wikipedia

Persuasion

Persuasion or persuasion arts is an umbrella term for influence. Persuasion can influence a person's beliefs, attitudes, intentions, motivations, or behaviours.

Persuasion is studied in many disciplines. Rhetoric studies modes of persuasion in speech and writing and is often taught as a classical subject.: 46  Psychology looks at persuasion through the lens of individual behaviour and neuroscience studies the brain activity associated with this behaviour. History and political science are interested in the role of propaganda in shaping historical events. In business, persuasion is aimed at influencing a person's (or group's) attitude or behaviour towards some event, idea, object, or another person (s) by using written, spoken, or visual methods to convey information, feelings, or reasoning, or a combination thereof. Persuasion is also often used to pursue personal gain, such as election campaigning, giving a sales pitch, or in trial advocacy. Persuasion can also be interpreted as using personal or positional resources to change people.

Examples of use of inveigle
1. They resorted to every possible means to inveigle her into the campaign.
2. For example, when jurors hear kidnapping cases, judges will no longer be required to explain that the perpetrator had to inveigle‘‘ his victim.
3. There are serious misgivings in Europe that the secretive Anglo–American agenda is to inveigle the Euro–Atlantic community in a new cold war with Russia.
4. If Blair really did inveigle middle England by encouraging individualism and consumer choice, never criticising greed and preferring to damn hoodies than talk of the poor, there may be no room for Brown to strike out progressively.
5. In one section of the movie, a Georgian pilot and an Armenian truck driver manage to inveigle their way into the hotel under the guise of belonging to a visiting delegation of surgeons.