different between cajolery vs cajoler
cajolery
English
Etymology
From French cajolerie.
Noun
cajolery (countable and uncountable, plural cajoleries)
- cajolement
Translations
cajolery From the web:
- cajolery what does it mean
- what is cajolery mean
- what does cajolery meaning in english
- what does cajole mean
- what do cajolery meaning
- what does cajolery
cajoler
English
Etymology
cajole +? -er
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -??l?(?)
Noun
cajoler (plural cajolers)
- A person who cajoles; a flatterer.
- (linguistics) A speech act intended to persuade or convince, such as the utterance "you know".
French
Etymology
Probably a blend of Middle French cageoler (“chatter like a jay”) (from gajole, dialectal diminutive of geai (“jaybird”)) + Old French gaioler (“entice into a cage”), which is from Medieval Latin gabiola, from Late Latin caveola, diminutive of Latin cavea (“cage, coop, enclosure, stall”).
Pronunciation
Verb
cajoler
- to cuddle, to cradle in one's arms
- (dated) to flatter, to cajole
Conjugation
Related terms
- cajoleur
- cajolerie
Descendants
- ? English: cajole
Further reading
- “cajoler” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
cajoler From the web:
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- cajolery vs cajoler
- flatterer vs cajoler
- cajole vs cajoler
- bard vs caroller
- carol vs caroller
- cajolest vs cajoles
- cajones vs cajoles
- cajolers vs cajoles
- terms vs teaseling
- teaseling vs teaselling
- teaselling vs weaselling
- adjures vs adjurer
- adjutes vs adjures
- adjurers vs adjures
- adjurers vs abjurers
- abjurer vs adjurer
- adjure vs adjurer
- adjuror vs adjurer
- adjusted vs adjuted
- adjuted vs adjute