win+over
11win over — do you really believe that flowers and jewelry are enough to win her over? Syn: persuade, convince, sway, prevail on; seduce …
12win over — (Roget s Thesaurus II) I verb To cause (another) to believe or feel sure about something: assure, convince, persuade, satisfy. See PERSUASION. II verb See WIN …
13win over — {v. phr.} To convert to one s position or point of view. * /The Democrats offered him a high level executive position and thus way won him over to their side./ …
14win over — {v. phr.} To convert to one s position or point of view. * /The Democrats offered him a high level executive position and thus way won him over to their side./ …
15win\ over — v. phr. To convert to one s position or point of view. The Democrats offered him a high level executive position and thus way won him over to their side …
16win over — persuade, cause someone to agree with one s cause …
17win round — ˌwin ˈover ˌwin ˈround [transitive] [present tense I/you/we/they win over he/she/it wins over …
18win someone over — win (someone/something) over to succeed in changing opinion. The senator made a stirring speech but failed to win over enough votes to pass his bill. The argument she used to win them over was not about who was right and who was wrong …
19win something over — win (someone/something) over to succeed in changing opinion. The senator made a stirring speech but failed to win over enough votes to pass his bill. The argument she used to win them over was not about who was right and who was wrong …
20win — ► VERB (winning; past and past part. won) 1) be successful or victorious in (a contest or conflict). 2) gain as a result of success in a contest, conflict, etc. 3) gain (someone s attention, support, or love). 4) (win over) gain the support or… …