Someone who is easily swayed
Viewed 20k times. For example: I just bought this bag yesterday and he came today with a new one too He never talks to her and now he does —just because I did in the morning. Improve this question. Community Bot 1. How is that person easily influenced? Does s he believe everything people say?
The following is the strict rule of this community. Questions on choosing an ideal word or phrase must include information on how it will be used in order to be answered. For help writing a good word or phrase request, see: About single word requests. Please edit your question accordingly. Rathony I added examples. Both the examples look more like "slavish copycat" than what I'd normally think of as "easily influenced", since in both cases it's unlikely the speaker actually intended to influence the [toady?
Perhaps impulsive? He is so impulsive. By the way, the usual idiom in English is "What do you call [something]," not "How do you call [something]. What do you call…? When anyone is absorbed in rapt attention in someone else's inspiring words as they outline an idea or way of thinking, the subjective attention is held because of the logic, the aesthetic, and the relevance of the words to one's own personal experience and motivations.
In these natural trance states, just like those orchestrated purposefully by a hypnotherapist, your 'critical faculties' are naturally less active when there is less you would naturally be critical of. To be suggestible is not to be gullible. The latter pertains to an empirical objective fact that can be shown accurate or inaccurate to any observer. The former term does not. To be open to suggestion, has no bearing on the accuracy of any incoming suggestions: nor whether such an objective accuracy is possible.
As with metaphysical belief. And a well-known example of suggestibility towards the good vs. Your best option may be to use "morally" or "ethically" as adverbs and pair them with some adjectives similar to the ones you dug up that imply a lack of commitment or dedication.
For example, morally impressionable or ethically irresolute. Capricious and malleable could also be good choices. Where here wrong would be a moral rather than factual judgement.
Fallible has its origins in the Latin fallere - to deceive, and also has the connotation of being 'subject to failure' where in use to describe oneself or another, that failure is often moral. Alternately, a candidate phrase to complete that sentence might be "susceptible to their influence s ".
Akrasia : Weakness of will: the condition in which while knowing what it would be best to do, one does something else. The phenomenon intrigued Plato and Aristotle, because the Socratic equation between knowing a thing to be good and desiring it makes it difficult to see how weakness of will is possible. Less optimistic philosophies find it equally hard to see how strength of will is possible.
Another somewhat perverse way to describe someone who is easily swayed is innocent. Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group.
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Words I have found that are close are: Impressionable - Easily influenced because of a lack of critical ability. You should upgrade or use an alternative browser.
A person who is easily persuaded or influenced. Thread starter Jypss Start date Sep 14, Jypss New Member Hong Kong. And I want to describe the central character as a person who is rather easily persuaded or influenced and therefore changes her mind frequently. I wonder if there would be a noun that describes this kind of people?
Thank you very much! Copyright Senior Member Penang. One word is impressionable : easily influenced or characterized by susceptibility to influence: an impressionable child, an impressionable age.
Collins also lists suggestible as a synonym of impressionable. California; Princeton, NJ.
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