Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    En·treat
    /inˈtrēt/

    verb

    • 1. ask someone earnestly or anxiously to do something: "his friends entreated him not to go"
    • 2. treat (someone) in a specified manner: archaic "the King, I fear, hath ill entreated her"
  2. People also ask

  3. Entreat is a verb that means to ask urgently or to persuade someone. Learn its synonyms, examples, history, and usage from the Merriam-Webster dictionary.

  4. Entreat means to try very hard to persuade someone to do something. Learn more about its usage, synonyms, and examples from the Cambridge English Corpus and other sources.

  5. verb (used with object) to ask (a person) earnestly; beseech; implore; beg: to entreat the judge for mercy. Synonyms: solicit, sue, importune, pray. to ask earnestly for (something): He entreated help in his work.

  6. Entreat means to try very hard to persuade someone to do something. Learn how to use this verb in different contexts, with synonyms and examples from the Cambridge English Corpus.

  7. To entreat is to ask for something that is really important, like when you entreat the jury to spare your life. The verb entreat implies that the person doing the entreating is really serious about what has to happen. Maybe it's even a matter of life and death, like when parents entreat their children to never drive drunk.

  8. Entreat is a formal verb that means to ask somebody to do something in a serious and often emotional way. Learn how to use it in sentences, synonyms, pronunciation and word origin.

  9. 6 days ago · Entreat means to ask someone very politely and seriously to do something, or to make an earnest request or petition for something. Learn more about its word forms, origin, usage and synonyms from Collins English Dictionary.

  1. People also search for