shuì / shuō
verb #18

Meanings

  1. 1 to persuade

Examples

Tā dàochù yóushuì, zhēngqǔ dàjiā de zhīchí.
He lobbied everywhere, seeking everyone's support.
Zhànguó shíqī de shuìkè kào kǒucái gǎibiàn guójiā mìngyùn.
Warring-States persuaders changed the fate of states with their rhetoric.

Tips

mistakes
Read shuì (4th tone), not shuō, only in the fixed political-persuasion compounds 游说 (to lobby) and 说客 (lobbyist; itinerant adviser). For ordinary “to persuade” use shuō in 说服 or the standalone verb . Mispronouncing 游说 as yóushuō is one of the most-corrected mistakes in Chinese news broadcasts.
history
The shuì reading is the signature of the 纵横家 — the “strategists” of the Warring States period who travelled between rival courts persuading rulers into alliances. Figures like Su Qin and Zhang Yi made 游说 a state-craft profession; the word still carries that diplomatic-rhetoric weight, distinct from everyday talking-someone-into-something.

Components

radical
yán
speech; word
Left is the speech radical, simplified side-form of . Marks as a speech-act verb. Anchors a vast family of speaking and communication chars — talk, request, yield, who, thank, lesson. Always the first hint a reader gets that the verb involves talking.
phonetic
duì
exchange; cash in
Right supplies the sound — duì drifting to shuō with significant Old Chinese consonant shift. The same phonetic family shows wide drift: sharp, remove, read, delighted. itself depicts a person opening their mouth — a faint speech-association that loosely supports the meaning.

Stroke Order

shuì