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Coaxing   /kˈoʊksɪŋ/   Listen
Coaxing

noun
1.
Flattery designed to gain favor.  Synonyms: blarney, soft soap, sweet talk.
adjective
1.
Pleasingly persuasive or intended to persuade.  Synonym: ingratiatory.  "Her manner is quiet and ingratiatory and a little too agreeable"



Coax

verb
(past & past part. coaxed; pres. part. coaxing)
1.
Influence or urge by gentle urging, caressing, or flattering.  Synonyms: blarney, cajole, inveigle, palaver, sweet-talk, wheedle.



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"Coaxing" Quotes from Famous Books



... directly I had nothing to do. Had I been a little younger the companies would very likely have been glad of me, for no one liked to sacrifice their beards to become Miss Julia or plain Mary Ann; and even the beardless subalterns had voices which no coaxing could soften down. But I lent them plenty of dresses; indeed, it was the only airing which a great many gay-coloured muslins had in the Crimea. How was I to know when I brought them what camp-life was? And in addition to this, I found it necessary to convert my kitchen into a ...
— Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands • Mary Seacole

... clutch within a hair's breadth of his shock of hair as it stooped over the table; but she restrained her fingers, and said, in a voice that choked with its efforts to be coaxing: ...
— Dombey and Son • Charles Dickens

... perverseness of their ideas, and the insolence of their feelings, were precisely what might be expected by all who really knew that remarkably vulgar class of men. They purposed to lecture the working classes, who were by far the wiser party of the two, in a jejune, coaxing, dull, religious-tract sort of tone, and criticised and deprecated everything like vigour, and a manly and genial tone of address in the new publication, while trying to push in as contributors effete and exhausted writers and friends ...
— Critical Miscellanies (Vol. 3 of 3) - Essay 6: Harriet Martineau • John Morley

... When Uncle Jake came across an unusually good pocket he would call me to it and hop on somewhere else. There was an element of sport in catching the dull-looking gobbets so many together. I soon got to know the likely stones—heavy ones that wanted coaxing over,—and discovered also that the winkles hide themselves in a green, rather gelatinous weed, fuzzy like kale tops, from which they can be combed with the fingers. They love, too, a shadowed pool which is tainted ...
— A Poor Man's House • Stephen Sydney Reynolds

... way," said Madam. "Lally, I intended to give you such a scolding as you could never forget, but I see it's no use. I can only implore of you not to give in to Miss Terry's coaxing again, no matter what the consequences." And then Granny paused, remembering those kisses on her cheek and those arms round ...
— Terry - Or, She ought to have been a Boy • Rosa Mulholland


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