Word family noun persuasion ≠ dissuasion persuasiveness adjective persuasive verb persuade ≠ dissuade adverb persuasively
From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishdissuadedis‧suade /dɪˈsweɪd/ verb [transitive] PERSUADEto persuade someone not to do something OPP persuadedissuade somebody from (doing) something a campaign to dissuade young people from smoking► see thesaurus at persuade —dissuasion /dɪˈsweɪʒən/ noun [uncountable]→ See Verb tableExamples from the Corpus
dissuade• In 1994,74 people were talked out of jumping; in 1993,46 people were dissuaded from suicide.• But none of these horrors had dissuaded Godolphin from travelling in the Reconciled Dominions.• I managed to dissuade her from that and we settled on lunch together the following day.• He wanted to come with me, and nothing I said could dissuade him.• The females are obviously well aware of this, as they try hard to dissuade other females from joining their chosen male.• Not that this dissuades upwards of 800 competitors from entering the event.• In other words, it might dissuade worthy lawsuits even as it fails to protect against outlandish ones.dissuade somebody from (doing) something• They accepted that this often meant dissuading him from acting on his bedrock convictions because of the political costs involved.• It was perhaps a strategy for dissuading him from coming round so often.• I was trying to dissuade them from doing so.• Frankie had seen it before and thought I wouldn't like it and tried to dissuade me from going in.• A small rise in interest rates would be unlikely to dissuade the firm from investing in this case.• The females are obviously well aware of this, as they try hard to dissuade other females from joining their chosen male.• Most of the bishops did their best to dissuade their clergy from subscribing any such addresses.• So methods have been developed to dissuade you from wandering off to somebody else's cash register.Origin dissuade (1500-1600) Latin dissuadere, from suadere “to persuade”