PLEAD Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster Plead belongs to the same class of verbs as bleed, lead, and feed, and like them it has a past and past participle with a short vowel spelled pled (or sometimes plead, which is pronounced alike)
Plead - definition of plead by The Free Dictionary Usage Note: In strict legal usage, one is said to plead guilty or plead not guilty but not to plead innocent In nonlegal contexts, however, plead innocent is well established
plead - WordReference. com Dictionary of English to appeal or entreat earnestly: to plead for time to use arguments or persuasions, as with a person, for or against something: She pleaded with him not to take the job
PLEAD Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com To plead is to ask for something from someone, often on the verge of begging You may plead with the phone company to give an appointment time that spans only three hours, but, regardless of your pleading, they will make you wait eight hours for the technician to finally show
PLEAD definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary If you plead with someone to do something, you ask them in an intense, emotional way to do it The woman pleaded with her daughter to come back home [VERB + with] He was kneeling on the floor pleading for mercy [VERB + for] 'Do not say that,' she pleaded [VERB with quote]
plead - Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Online From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English plead pliːd verb 1 [intransitive, transitive] to ask for something that you want very much, in a sincere and emotional way SYN beg ‘Don’t go!’
Plead Definition Meaning | Britannica Dictionary He pleaded that he didn't have enough money to pay his bill On that particular issue, I will have to plead ignorance [=to say that I do not know anything about it]