Beseech, call upon, beg, appeal to your humanity, request your (participation, consideration, action) in... etc.
Implore has the same root as "explore", and it is usually a term meant to bring another to your decision or get them to share your same thought, which is similar to the idea of explore where you discover something new in the external environment.
I am imploring you not to use the word implore in a sentence. I implore you not to seek the evil totem from the Isle of the Dead.
I whip my hair back and forth because i try to implore it.
Beg, plead, and implore.
beg, entreat, beseech, implore, appeal to, petition.
begging
I am imploring you not to use the word implore in a sentence. I implore you not to seek the evil totem from the Isle of the Dead.
I implore you to keep asking these questions! It is synonymous with the word 'beg'.
I whip my hair back and forth because i try to implore it.
"Implore" is found on page 49 of "The Giver" by Lois Lowry.
No, the word "implore" cannot be used in succession in the same sentence. It is redundant and unnecessary. Using it once is sufficient to convey the meaning of strongly urging or begging someone to do something.
Synonyms could be implore or entreat.
Beg, plead, and implore.
request, solicit, beseech, entreat, implore
Trousers
beg, entreat, beseech, implore, appeal to, petition.
Plead implore, beseech, request, petition, solicit, entreat
You would think it would be implore but it is not. Implore means to beg for urgently. However, the opposite of explore would simply be to not explore or to not search. So the best word for that would be either: lazy, lose, or pass by.