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    Im·por·tune
    /ˌimpərˈto͞on/

    verb

  2. The meaning of IMPORTUNE is to press or urge with troublesome persistence. How to use importune in a sentence. Did you know? Synonym Discussion of Importune.

  3. to press or beset with solicitations; demand with urgency or persistence. Synonyms: solicit, supplicate, implore, entreat, beseech. to make improper advances toward (a person). to beg for (something) urgently or persistently.

  4. Imagine needing something so badly that you cannot stop asking for it: then you might importune someone to get it. After a year of being importuned, dad let me have the car.

  5. IMPORTUNE meaning: 1. to make repeated, forceful requests for something, usually in a way that is annoying or causing…. Learn more.

  6. verb. If someone importunes another person, they ask them for something or ask them to do something, in an annoying way. [formal, disapproval] One can no longer walk the streets without seeing beggars importuning passers-by. [VERB noun] Synonyms: pester, press, plague, hound More Synonyms of importune.

  7. Definition of importune verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. 1. To make an earnest request of (someone), especially insistently or repeatedly: "A dozen reporters importuned every passing ambassador to speak to them" (Felicity Barringer). 2. Archaic. a. To ask for (something) urgently or repeatedly. b. To annoy; vex. v.intr. To plead or urge irksomely, often persistently. adj. Archaic. Importunate.

  9. Importune definition: To make an earnest request of (someone), especially insistently or repeatedly.

  10. The earliest known use of the verb importune is in the mid 1500s. OED's earliest evidence for importune is from 1530, in the writing of John Palsgrave, teacher and scholar of languages. importune is of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French.

  11. 4 days ago · To bother, irritate, trouble. 1603, Michel de Montaigne, chapter XVII, in John Florio, transl., The Essayes […], book II, London: […. ] Val[entine]Simmesfor Edward Blount […], →OCLC: To deliberate, be it but in slight matters, doth importuneme.

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