different between dissuader vs dissuaded
dissuader
English
Etymology
dissuade +? -er
Noun
dissuader (plural dissuaders)
- One who dissuades.
- 1827, The Monthly Repository of Theology and General Literature (page 303)
- From all our experience on the subject, Members of Parliament have always been the dissuaders of the attempts of Dissenters; among whom an almost irrepressible impatience and disgust at their and their leaders' apathy have long existed.
- 1827, The Monthly Repository of Theology and General Literature (page 303)
Synonyms
- dehorter
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /di.sy.a.de/
- Homophones: dissuadai, dissuadé, dissuadée, dissuadées, dissuadés, dissuadez
Verb
dissuader
- to dissuade; to put off
Conjugation
Related terms
- persuader
Further reading
- “dissuader” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
dissuader From the web:
dissuaded
English
Verb
dissuaded
- simple past tense and past participle of dissuade
dissuaded From the web:
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- dissuader vs dissuaded
- terms vs imperiwigged
- groveled vs groveler
- leaflets vs leafless
- leaves vs leafless
- leaflessness vs leafless
- band vs hatbox
- hatbox vs catbox
- hatboxes vs chatboxes
- hatboxes vs hotboxes
- hatbox vs chatbox
- hitboxes vs hatboxes
- catboxes vs hatboxes
- betwene vs betweene
- hakkanese vs taxonomy
- unsmelted vs unmelted
- preexamined vs reexamined
- sysadminning vs taxonomy
- underleaf vs taxonomy
- deerberry vs taxonomy