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Influence ˈɪnfluəns Work Exert Early Shows Younger Peer

Word3 influence
WordType (noun)
Phonetic /ˈɪnfluəns/ /ˈɪnfluəns/
Example
  • his early work shows the influence of cézanne and matisse.
  • he had considerable influence on younger sculptors.
  • peer group members can exert a strong influence on each others' activities.
  • such media pressure exercises influence on policymakers.
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Content

influence

(noun)/ˈɪnfluəns/ /ˈɪnfluəns/
  1. the effect that somebody/something has on the way a person thinks or behaves or on the way that something works or develops
    • His early work shows the influence of Cézanne and Matisse.
    • He had considerable influence on younger sculptors.
    • Peer group members can exert a strong influence on each others' activities.
    • Such media pressure exercises influence on policymakers.
    • the influence of the climate on agricultural production
    • What is exactly is the influence of social media on children?
    • The religious community wished to be independent of outside influence.

    Extra Examples

    • He had a profound influence on modern poets.
    • The king tried to bring his influence to bear on the parliament.
    • The legacy of Ancient Rome represented the overwhelming influence on Romanesque architecture.
    • There was no influence from outside.
    • They examined the influence of farm size on technology adoption.
    • This paper evaluates the relative influence of religions.
    • I think the whole place has a very calming influence.
    • The size of the plate has an influence on how much we eat.
    • The internet's influence is growing every day.
    • Children around the age of eight are especially vulnerable to the influence of television.
    • Spanish architecture shows Moorish influence.
  2. the power that somebody/something has to make somebody/something behave in a particular way
    • He worked his way into a position of power and influence in the city.
    • Her parents no longer have any real influence over her.
    • It was suggested she had undue influence over her husband.
    • She could probably exert her influence with the manager and get you a job.
    • She needs to use her influence with her party colleagues.
    • He committed the crime under the influence of drugs.
    • The country is beginning to expand its sphere of influence.

    Extra Examples

    • Can you use your influence with the director to get me a part in the movie?
    • Drug cartels wielded enormous influence in the city.
    • She has a certain amount of influence in the way things are organized.
    • He used his influence with local officials to gain commercial advantages.
    • Her wealth gave her influence over affairs of state.
    • His political influence was waning.
    • Outdated prejudices still exert a powerful influence.
    • I have absolutely no influence over him.
    • It's easy to trace the influence she's exerted on contemporary artists.
    • Queen Isabella was urged to use her influence with the French monarch.
    • The unions have been able to extend their influence over all industries.
    • Their influence extended as far as China.
    • She tried to bring her influence to bear on her husband.
    • The court found that the bank exerted undue influence over Mrs Black in getting her to sign the contract.
    • The court was told that he was under the influence of alcohol when he committed the offence.
    • The town grew under the influence of colonialism.
    • The artists exerted a strong influence on a younger generation.
    • Much of his writing can be attributed to the influence of Freud.
    • She came under the influence of Sartre at this period.
    • the effects of peer influence on crime
  3. a person or thing that affects the way a person behaves and thinks
    • She draws on her diverse cultural influences to express herself.
    • His first music teacher was a major influence in his life.
    • There seem to be several influences at work in (= affecting) his writing.
    • Those friends are a bad influence on her.

    Extra Examples

    • They said she was a bad influence on the other children.
    • a study of children exposed to different cultural influences
    • Who were your early influences?
    • There were a number of influences at work in Gaudí's architecture.
    • They were a major influence upon the development of the sport.
    • The band had many influences.
    • She's by far the biggest influence on my writing.
    • Parents often seek to shelter their children from outside influences
    • His uncle had been a formative influence from his earliest years.
    • He is a writer of Indian descent and draws upon diverse cultural influences.
    • The massive intellect of his mother had been a formative influence from his earliest years.
  4. having had too much alcohol to drink
    • She was charged with driving under the influence.
    • He was arrested for driving under the influence.

    Word Origin

    • late Middle English: from Old French, or from medieval Latin influentia ‘inflow’, from Latin influere, from in- ‘into’ + fluere ‘to flow’. The word originally had the general sense ‘an influx, flowing matter’, also specifically (in astrology) ‘the flowing in of ethereal fluid (affecting human destiny)’. The current sense was established in Scholastic Latin by the 13th cent., but not recorded in English until the late 16th cent.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

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