Persuasion

来自Big Physics

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late Middle English: from Latin persuasio(n- ), from the verb persuadere (see persuade).


Ety img persuasion.png

wiktionary

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From French persuasion and its source, Latin persuāsiō, from persuādēre, from suādēre(“to advise, recommend”).


etymonline

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persuasion (n.)

late 14c., persuasioun, "action of inducing (someone) to believe (something) by appeals to reason (not by authority, force, or fear); an argument to persuade, inducement," from Old French persuasion (14c.) and directly from Latin persuasionem (nominative persuasio) "a convincing, persuading," noun of action from past-participle stem of persuadere "persuade, convince," from per "thoroughly, strongly" (see per) + suadere "to urge, persuade," from PIE root *swād- "sweet, pleasant" (see sweet (adj.)).


Meaning "state of being convinced" is from 1530s; that of "religious belief, creed" is from 1620s. Colloquial or humorous sense of "kind, sort, nationality" is by 1864.