Inveigle
To persuade or attempt to persuade by flattery or guile.
To persuade using flattery; to cajole or charm.
According to Websters Dictionary, wheedle means to influence or entice by soft words or flattery.
The verb "cajole" means to persuade, to convince someone by coaxing, flattery, or appeals. e.g. The girl cajoled her boyfriend into letting her use his car. The connotation of flattery is also seen in the verbs wheedle, entice, and inveigle.
To influence someone using flattery or lies.
The official definition for the word wheedle is "employ endearments or flattery to persuade someone to do something or give one something."
Lady Macbeth uses flattery when she is trying to manipulate her husband, Macbeth, into going through with their plan to kill King Duncan. She praises his manhood and bravery to persuade him to take action.
Cajole is defined as a way to persuade another by means of flattery, or promises. It means to coax. It is a verb and it is derived from "chattering like a jay bird."
The polite form of "snow job" means an effort to deceive, overwhelm, or persuade with insincere talk, especially flattery.
"Flattery will get you anywhere" is an old axiom. She went out with him because he's so good at flattery. Will flattery never cease?
Flattery will not work, I need results!Your poor behavior is not alleviated by your flattery.
no, but false praise is a synonym for flattery