Why this word is great
OVERPERSUADE — [Verb] To win someone over through persuasion, especially to convince them to do something against their own judgement or wishes. From over- (indicating excess or overcoming) + persuade (Latin persuadere, "to convince"). Unlike "coerce" (which implies force or threats) or "dissuade" (which turns someone away from an action), "overpersuade" is the slow erosion of resistance through sheer rhetorical persistence. It is the salesman's honeyed insistence that you need the extended warranty, the lover's relentless logic that chips away at your resolve, or the friend's cheerful badgering until you agree to that third drink—each a quiet victory of words over will, leaving you vaguely unsettled by your own compliance.