(1) The act of persuading (or attempting to persuade
(2) The act of persuading (or attempting to persuade)
(3) Communication intended to induce belief or action
(1) It makes more sense for Jospin simply to voice the warning and rely on the government's powers of moral suasion .
(2) We of all people ought to be able to tell the difference between moral suasion and compulsion.
(3) The best we can do is to use moral suasion and seek to persuade the U.S. from its chosen path.
(4) As a group, private-sector actors would seem more amenable to moral suasion than are either state leaders or guerillas.
(5) The U.S. could use moral and political suasion to encourage American companies to cut links to Rangoon.
(6) They ought to be decided by school administrators, subject to moral suasion by parents and by the public, not by courts.
(7) Moral suasion by the private sector in getting their members to pay up their taxes is another way of helping to ease the cash crunch of the state.
(8) Meanwhile, it is said that the ministry intends to use moral suasion , in the first place, to get absentee teachers to mend their ways, and then disciplinary measures.
(9) The clearing banks found the use of both moral suasion and direct controls particularly irksome
(10) We wait like small children to see if an aging Ayatollah will decide to evict us by force or moral suasion .
(11) Much evidence indicates that these changes in the lives of aristocratic women arose from a combination of moral suasion , public pressure, and political strategizing.
(12) The tactics of social movements, too, may vary, ranging from moral suasion to civil disobedience, from demonstrations to petitioning, and from armed self-defense to armed struggle.
(13) Aspects of the society may not be moral and individualist feminists may use education, protest, boycott, and moral suasion - the whole slate of persuasive strategies - to affect change.
(14) Any sort of u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510conversionu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb happens through a complex and mysterious combination of rational argument, moral suasion , aesthetic appeal, and gut intuition.
(15) Rogue states are, by definition, impervious to moral suasion .
(16) Even many radically liberal activists in the United States believe that their agenda should be put into force by suasion and democracy rather than judicial fiat.
(17) Perhaps it was awareness of the complicated reality that made brotherhood and women's auxiliary leaders understand that moral suasion was not enough to maintain sober railwaymen.
(18) Would it not have been better to allow internal reform, political evolution, and moral suasion combined with unfettered commerce to work change?
(19) It is up to us to use moral suasion to carry the day; no one else is going to take on the task for us.
(20) Another possible explanation for the failure of nominal rates to rise is the wartime moral suasion by the U.S. government described above.
persuasion