[f. as prec. + -ING2.] That cajoles; deceitfully persuasive.

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a. 1715.  Burnet, Own Time (1766), I. 518. The king writ him a cajoling letter.

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1746–7.  Hervey, Medit. (1758), II. 17. The busy Swarm of vain Images, and cajoling Temptations, that beset Us.

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1820.  Foster, in Life & Corr. (1846), II. 6. To assume a cajoling tone.

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