Prevail on


Successfully persuade or influence, as in They prevailed on me to speak at their annual luncheon. This term uses prevail in the sense of “exert superior force.” It replaced prevail with in the mid-1600s.

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  • Preval

    noun 1. René García [ruh-ney gahr-see-uh] /rəˈneɪ gɑrˈsi ə/ (Show IPA), born 1943, Haitian politician: prime minister 1991–95, president 1996–2001, 2006–11.

  • Prevalence

    noun 1. the condition of being prevalent, or widespread: the prevalence of AIDS in developing countries. prevalence prev·a·lence (prěv’ə-ləns) n. The total number of cases of a disease in a given population at a specific time.

  • Prevalent

    adjective 1. widespread; of wide extent or occurrence; in general use or acceptance. 2. having the superiority or ascendancy. 3. Archaic. effectual or efficacious. adjective 1. widespread or current 2. superior in force or power; predominant

  • Prevalently

    adjective 1. widespread; of wide extent or occurrence; in general use or acceptance. 2. having the superiority or ascendancy. 3. Archaic. effectual or efficacious. adjective 1. widespread or current 2. superior in force or power; predominant

  • Prevaricate

    verb (used without object), prevaricated, prevaricating. 1. to speak falsely or misleadingly; deliberately misstate or create an incorrect impression; lie. verb 1. (intransitive) to speak or act falsely or evasively with intent to deceive


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