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- INDUCE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
Inducing is usually gentle persuasion; you may, for instance, induce a friend to go to a concert, or induce a child to stop crying An inducement is something that might lure you to do something, though inducements are occasionally a bit menacing, like the Godfather's offer that you can't refuse
- INDUCE Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
INDUCE definition: to lead or move by persuasion or influence, as to some action or state of mind See examples of induce used in a sentence
- induce verb - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . .
induce somebody to do something (formal) to persuade or influence somebody to do something Nothing would induce me to take the job induce something (formal) to cause something Hearing loss is often induced by exposure to loud noise
- INDUCE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
They induced her to take the job by offering her a bonus If doctors induce labor, they cause a baby to be born before its natural time
- INDUCE definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
To induce a state or condition means to cause it Doctors said surgery could induce a heart attack [VERB noun] an economic crisis induced by high oil prices [VERB-ed]
- Induced - definition of induced by The Free Dictionary
To lead or move, as to a course of action, by influence or persuasion See Synonyms at persuade 2 To bring about or stimulate the occurrence of; cause: a drug used to induce labor 3 To infer by inductive reasoning 4 Physics a To produce (an electric current or a magnetic charge) by induction b
- induce - WordReference. com Dictionary of English
to move (someone) by persuasion: [~ + object] The unsuccessful job interview induced a sense of failure in him [~ + object + to + verb] See if you can induce him to stay
- induce, v. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary
induce is a borrowing from Latin Etymons: Latin indūcĕre What is the earliest known use of the verb induce? The earliest known use of the verb induce is in the Middle English period (1150—1500) OED's earliest evidence for induce is from 1401, in Political Poems How is the verb induce pronounced?
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