To coax involves emotional manipulation; whereas, to convince involves intellectual manipulation.
To coax is to convince someone slowly or through compliments to do something.
Convince, recruit
coax, convince, induce, coerce, influence, sway, inveigle, entice, tempt, lure, cajole, wheedle;
This would depend upon your TV and the receiver and if it has a coax port available on the back. You can use an RG6 coax cable between the receiver and TV. Most newer HD receivers do not have a coax port on the back
assure, persuade, satisfy, reassure, induce, coax, talk into, prevail upon
How did you coax me in to writing this?
Yes, coax is a verb.
No, it is not an adverb. Coax is a verb.
You can install the 110v line on one stud and the coax jack on any other, just don't put them on the same stud. This will cause major crosstalk in the coax line.
If you are not at least twenty years old, you will not be able to convince them because they were young once and they know you have to be a certain age before you can really be able to tell the difference between love and infatuation. If you have to convince your parents, you are not mature enough. When the time comes, you will only have to convince yourself.
You may have to coax an answer out of another user here. He tried to coax the cat out of its hiding place. Spectacular commercials are designed to coax visitors to the theme park.
Another word for persuade might include coax or convince or coerce. You could also use wheedle or cajole as a synonym for persuade.