Webster's Online Dictionary
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Definition: CAJOLED

Part of Speech Definition
Verb 1. Of Cajole.[Websters]
2. To be gilded. [Eve - graph theoretic]
3. To have coaxed or wheedled. [Eve - graph theoretic]
4. To be rooked. [Eve - graph theoretic]
5. To have flattered, wooed or ingratiated. [Eve - graph theoretic]
6. To be cogged. [Eve - graph theoretic]
7. To have fooled. [Eve - graph theoretic]
8. To be greased. [Eve - graph theoretic]
9. To have gulled. [Eve - graph theoretic]
10. To have conned or cozened.[Eve - graph theoretic]
Verb Past Tense 1. Past tense conjugation of the verb cajole.[Eve - graph theoretic]
Verb Base
(cajole)
1. Influence or urge by gentle urging, caressing, or flattering.[Wordnet].
2. To deceive with flattery or fair words; to wheedle.[Websters].
3. Base verb from the following inflections: cajoling, cajoled, cajoles, cajoler, cajolers, cajolingly and cajoledly.[Eve - graph theoretic]

Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), compiled from various sources, under license.

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"Cajoled" is a common misspelling or typo for: cajoles, cajoler.

Date "Cajoled" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1715. (references)

Definition: CAJOLED

Part of SpeechDefinition
Verb1. Of Cajole.[Websters]
2. To be gilded. [Eve - graph theoretic]
3. To have coaxed or wheedled. [Eve - graph theoretic]
4. To be rooked. [Eve - graph theoretic]
5. To have flattered, wooed or ingratiated. [Eve - graph theoretic]
6. To be cogged. [Eve - graph theoretic]
7. To have fooled. [Eve - graph theoretic]
8. To be greased. [Eve - graph theoretic]
9. To have gulled. [Eve - graph theoretic]
10. To have conned or cozened.[Eve - graph theoretic]
Verb Past Tense1. Past tense conjugation of the verb cajole.[Eve - graph theoretic]
Verb Base
(cajole)
1. Influence or urge by gentle urging, caressing, or flattering.[Wordnet].
2. To deceive with flattery or fair words; to wheedle.[Websters].
3. Base verb from the following inflections: cajoling, cajoled, cajoles, cajoler, cajolers, cajolingly and cajoledly.[Eve - graph theoretic]

Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), compiled from various sources, under license.

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Date "CAJOLED" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1715. (references)

Specialty Definition: cajole

DomainDefinition
ComputingCAJOLE (Chris And John's Own LanguagE) A dataflow language developed by Chris Hankin and John Sharp at Westfield College. ["The Data Flow Programming Language CAJOLE: An Informal Introduction", C.L. Hankin et al, SIGPLAN Notices 16(7):35-44 (Jul 1981)]. (1994-11-08) Source: The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing.
19th Century SatireV. t., From Grk. kalos, beautiful, and Eng. jolly, to jolly beautifully. Source: Foolish Dictionary, 1904.
WikipedicCAJOLE (short for Chris And John's Own LanguagE) is a dataflow language developed by Chris Hankin and John Sharp at Westfield College. (references)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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