inveigle

to persuade

TRANSLATION

inveigle (somebody) = jdn. verlocken, verleiten, verführen

STATISTICS

IN THE PRESS

“Was Diana INVEIGLED into the BBC Panorama interview?”

Stephen Poole - Guardian Headline ( 27 May 2021)

“These mRNAs would INVEIGLE a cell’s ribosomes into producing not just the protein that was meant to be delivered, but also a second protein, called RNA-replicase,…”

The Economist – ‘Covid-19 vaccines have alerted the world to the power of RNA therapies’ (27 March 2021)

Did you
know?

inveigle
verb

- persuade (someone) to do something by means of deception or flattery

- influence or urge by gentle urging, caressing, or flattering

Oxford Languages / Vocabulary dot com


WORD ORIGIN

“Inveigle” (formerly also "enveigle"), stems from the late 15th century, from Anglo-Norman French envegler, an alteration of the Old French aveugler "to blind".


THE MINISTER WHO LOST HIS HEAD

The Catholic minister of Theodoric the Great, hoping to inveigle his way into the king’s favour, one day declared that he was renouncing his Catholicism to embrace the king’s Arian faith.

Theodoric was not impressed: “If this man is not faithful to his God”, he asked, “how can he be faithful to me, a mere man?”

Theodoric had the minister beheaded!

Note: Theodoric The Great (454-526 CE) king of the Ostrogoths (from 471), invaded Italy in 488 and completed the conquest of virtually the entire peninsula and Sicily by 493, making himself king of Italy (493–526) and establishing his capital at Ravenna.


SYNONYMS

- to persuade (someone) to do something by means of temptation or persuasion

allure, beguile, blandish, blarney, butter up, cajole (into), captivate, coax, coerce, dangle a carrot in front of, ensnare, entangle, entice, entrap, entreat, fast-talk, finagle, flatter, ingratiate, INVEIGLE, jolly, lure, manoeuvre, mousetrap, nudge, seduce, smooth-talk, soft-soap, steer, sucker, sweet-talk, sweeten up, tempt, wheedle (into), whet the appetite of, wile, woo


SMUGGLE OWAD into an English conversation, say something like:

“The sad reality is that bad actors will always try to INVEIGLE their way into our confidence by pretending to be trustworthy.”


THANKS to Gloria for suggesting today’s OWAD.


HERZLICHEN DANK to all readers helping me keep OWAD alive with single or monthly donations at:

https://donorbox.org/please-become-a-friend-of-owad-3

and,

Paul Smith, IBAN: DE75 7316 0000 0002 5477 40

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