Use "entreat" in a sentence

1. Please help me, I entreat you.

2. " Come thou, and entreat his blessing!

3. Please don't go, I entreat you.

4. May I entreat a favour of you ?

5. She was not accustomed to entreat.

6. I entreat this favour of you.

7. To entreat earnestly and often repeatedly; exhort.

8. I entreat this favor of you.

9. With this blood... we humbly... entreat...

10. I entreat you to show mercy.

11. I entreat you to tell me more, sir.

12. She shouldn't entreat her elder like that.

13. May I entreat a little favour of you?

14. 17 She was not accustomed to entreat.

15. ' Entreat me to believe it no more, Miss Manette.

16. We entreat you to consider these questions prayerfully.

17. They entreat me to acquaint her with it.

18. (1 Timothy 5:1, 2) Do you entreat, not browbeat?

19. Beg, entreat, Beseech, implore, supplicate, adjure, importune mean to ask urgently

20. 5 synonyms for Adjure: beseech, entreat, conjure, bid, press

21. I entreat you to contribute generously to the building fund.

22. In danger, entreat highly skilled doctor to move to be saved certainly.

23. His mother has no alternative, be forced to entreat Aidegan to help.

24. Be careful of my friend , I entreat you, and leave me.

25. I entreat you to believe in the sincerity of the sentiments.

26. I entreat you to separate the author entirely from the man.

27. To try to influence, as by insistent arguments; importune or entreat.

28. However much you may entreat him, you will get little or nothing.

29. Beseech To entreat; supplicate; implore; ask or pray with urgency: followed by a personal object

30. Charles Darnay felt it hopeless to entreat him further , and his pride was touched besides.

31. Some common synonyms of Beseech are adjure, beg, entreat, implore, importune, and supplicate

32. He beseeched me to entreat your Majesties to hear and see the matter.

33. And he beseeched me to entreat your Majesties To hear and see the matter.

34. They consider their relationship with Jehovah to be precious as they entreat him for guidance.

35. When being reviled, we bless; when being persecuted, we bear up; when being defamed, we entreat.”

36. This page shows answers to the clue Beseech, followed by 3 definitions like “Solicitation; supplication”, “To ask or entreat with …

37. Beseeches definition: ask for or request earnestly synonyms: conjure, adjure, entreat, press, plead, bid antonyms: curse, bless, delay, decompression, cool

38. He wrote: “When being reviled, we bless; when being persecuted, we bear up; when being defamed, we entreat.”

39. "Oh, very well, very well! "Denisov cried; "now it's no use crying off, it's your turn to sing the barcarolle , I entreat you.

40. God loves us at first most freely, without any entreaties or Beseechings, and then we come both to entreat and to beseech his favor

41. Working together with him, we also entreat you not to accept the undeserved kindness of God and miss its purpose.

42. Adjure: verb administer an oath, affirm , appeal to , ask , attest , beseech , bid , bind , call , charge , command , declare , enjoin , entreat , enunciate , exhort

43. Miracles can be worked by Him alone, although mere mortals may entreat Him by prayer to perform them on their behalf.

44. Verb beg, ask, petition, call upon, plead with, solicit, implore, entreat, importune, adjure, supplicate She Beseeched him to cut his drinking and smoking

45. Verb beg, ask, petition, call upon, plead with, solicit, implore, entreat, importune, adjure, supplicate She Beseeched him to cut his drinking and smoking

46. beseek (third-person singular simple present Beseeks, present participle beseeking, simple past and past participle besought) (transitive, dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) To beseech; entreat.

47. To charge or command earnestly, often under the threat of a penalty; to entreat solemnly: to Adjure the witness to tell the truth Not to be confused with:

48. IN A LITTLE TOWN RUPERT HUGHES I am called Curlicue, and am an object of derision; I entreat you to make me less ridiculous.' THE RED FAIRY BOOK VARIOUS

49. She pulls to land little leave of gusset, use red swollen and inflamed to swollenly looking at him, take a to in fine threadsly entreat in eye, "eldest brother, never so, you once promised mine."

50. Beseechingly in a beseeching manner; "`You must help me,' she said imploringly besought {f} entreat, plead, beg, ask earnestly, request besought the past tense and past participle of beseech besought of Beseech besought obsolete, past of beseech

51. Adjure: 1 v command solemnly Type of: burden , charge , saddle impose a task upon, assign a responsibility to v ask for or request earnestly Synonyms: beseech , bid , conjure , entreat , press Type of: plead appeal or request earnestly

52. When the Barmecide had done rubbing his hands, he raised his voice, and cried, "Set food before us at once, we are very hungry." No food was brought, but the Barmecide pretended to help himself from a dish, and carry a morsel to his mouth, saying as he did so, "Eat, my friend, eat, I entreat.

53. O God, the Father, All Powerful and All Merciful, Who hast created all things, Who knowest and Conceivest them universally, and to Whom nothing is hidden, nothing is impossible; I entreat Thy Grace for me and for Thy servants, because Thou seest and knowest well that we perform not this work to tempt Thy Strength and Thy Power as if in doubt thereof, but rather that we may know and understand the …

54. "disposed to give oneself undue importance, aggressively haughty," late 14c., from Old French arrogant (14c.), from Latin Arrogantem (nominative arrogans) "assuming, overbearing, insolent," present participle of arrogare "to claim for oneself, assume," from ad "to" (see ad-) + rogare "to ask, entreat, request," apparently a figurative use of a PIE verb meaning literally "to stretch out (the hand)," from …

55. Arrogate (v.) "claim or demand presumptuously," 1530s, from Latin arrogatus, past participle of arrogare "to claim for oneself," from assimilated form of ad "to" (see ad-) + rogare "to ask, to propose (a law, a candidate); to ask a favor, entreat, request," apparently a figurative use of a PIE verb meaning literally "to stretch out (the hand)," from *rog-, variant of the root *reg-"move in a