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  1. Dictionary
    in·vei·gle
    [inˈvāɡ(ə)l]
    verb
    inveigle (verb) · inveigles (third person present) · inveigled (past tense) · inveigled (past participle) · inveigling (present participle)
    1. persuade (someone) to do something by means of deception or flattery:
      "we cannot inveigle him into putting pen to paper"
      • (inveigle oneselfone's way into)
        gain entrance to (a place) by persuading (someone) with deception or flattery:
        "Jones had inveigled himself into her house"
    Origin
    late 15th century (in the sense ‘beguile, deceive’; formerly also as enveigle): from Anglo-Norman French envegler, alteration of Old French aveugler ‘to blind’, from aveugle ‘blind’.
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  3. verb (used with object), in·vei·gled, in·vei·gling. to entice, lure, or ensnare by flattery or artful talk or inducements (usually followed by into): to inveigle a person into playing bridge. to acquire, win, or obtain by beguiling talk or methods (usually followed by from or away): to inveigle a theater pass from a person.
    www.dictionary.com/browse/inveigle
    Inveigle, a word that dates from the 16th century, refers to the act of using clever talk, trickery, or flattery either to persuade somebody to do something or to obtain something, but etymologically the word is linked to eyesight—or the lack thereof.
    www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/inveigle
    inveigle verb [ T ] formal us / ɪnˈveɪ.ɡ ə l / uk / ɪnˈveɪ.ɡ ə l / to persuade someone to do something in a clever and dishonest way, when they do not want to do it:
    dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/invei…
    in•vei•gle. (ɪnˈveɪ gəl, -ˈvi-) v.t. -gled, -gling. 1. to entice or lure by artful talk or inducements. 2. to acquire by beguiling talk or methods: to inveigle a door pass from the usher. [1485–95; variant of envegle < Anglo-French enveogler = en- en - 1 + Old French (a)vogler to blind]
    www.thefreedictionary.com/inveigle
     
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