What's the difference between dissuasion and dissuasive?

Dissuasion


Definition:

  • (n.) The act of dissuading; exhortation against a thing; dehortation.
  • (n.) A motive or consideration tending to dissuade; a dissuasive.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) A force of 110 heavily armed officers, led by the elite tactical unit Recherche, Assistance, Intervention, Dissuasion (Raid), launched an assault on a third‑storey flat at 8 rue Corbillon, a few doors down from a primary school and a 15-minute walk from the Stade de France.
  • (2) The minimum punishment was not sufficient to have the necessary dissuasive effect.
  • (3) The second ('Hooked') reflected a feeling of inability to give up smoking, and a resentment at other's attempts at dissuasion.
  • (4) Although to date BRMs have shown only limited activity in restricted subsets of patients which may be viewed as dissuasion to some investigators; nonetheless, it should also be a stimulus to conduct careful, basic, and clinical experimentation aimed at verifying the promise from preclinical studies and to obtain further fundamental information on the BRM mechanism of action that would provide a basis for the ultimate utilization of these agents as well as the identification-development of appropriate analogs predicted on the deficiencies observed to date with the BRM.
  • (5) "But the idea of the reform isn't to give us fines but to be dissuasive enough so companies have compliance with the rules."
  • (6) EoN, and indeed other market participants in the generating sector, are hoping for a dissuasive sentencing to discourage similar such incidents in the future."
  • (7) The report, Drugs: International Comparators, documents in great detail the experience of Portugal, where personal use was decriminalised nearly 11 years ago and those arrested for drugs are given the choice of going before a health “dissuasion commission” or facing a criminal justice process.
  • (8) The UK chief executive of energy giant E.ON repeatedly lobbied the then-energy secretary Ed Miliband and others over the sentencing of activists disrupting the company's power plants, warning that any failure to issue "dissuasive" sentences could "impact" upon investment decisions in the UK.
  • (9) That won’t put anyone off.” More confusing was the suggestion that UK Border Force officers would be visiting camps to provide migrants with a “more dissuasive and realistic sense of life” in the UK.
  • (10) Every Thursday, in the square below the presidential balcony, the "Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo" demonstrated, despite every dissuasion, that the disappeared would never be forgotten until justice was done.
  • (11) These actions are having a dissuasive effect on protesters, said the organisation.
  • (12) It does not cover specific drug therapies for alcoholism (aversion, chemical restraint, dissuasion), nor nonspecific drug therapies (vitamins, magnesium) the interest and limits of which are well known.
  • (13) Dissuasion and inappropriate advice from doctors significantly delayed diagnosis in 25% of all cases.
  • (14) During the medical follow up, with the help of specialized functional tests, the physician may detect a state of overtraining and start a dissuasive action against doping habits.
  • (15) It also provides that such measures must be “effective, proportionate and dissuasive”.
  • (16) • Piloting a system used in Portugal, where drug use has been decriminalised, which involves “dissuasion commissions” assessing drug users and diverting them from the criminal justice system and into treatment.

Dissuasive


Definition:

  • (a.) Tending to dissuade or divert from a measure or purpose; dehortatory; as, dissuasive advice.
  • (n.) A dissuasive argument or counsel; dissuasion; dehortation.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) A force of 110 heavily armed officers, led by the elite tactical unit Recherche, Assistance, Intervention, Dissuasion (Raid), launched an assault on a third‑storey flat at 8 rue Corbillon, a few doors down from a primary school and a 15-minute walk from the Stade de France.
  • (2) The minimum punishment was not sufficient to have the necessary dissuasive effect.
  • (3) The second ('Hooked') reflected a feeling of inability to give up smoking, and a resentment at other's attempts at dissuasion.
  • (4) Although to date BRMs have shown only limited activity in restricted subsets of patients which may be viewed as dissuasion to some investigators; nonetheless, it should also be a stimulus to conduct careful, basic, and clinical experimentation aimed at verifying the promise from preclinical studies and to obtain further fundamental information on the BRM mechanism of action that would provide a basis for the ultimate utilization of these agents as well as the identification-development of appropriate analogs predicted on the deficiencies observed to date with the BRM.
  • (5) "But the idea of the reform isn't to give us fines but to be dissuasive enough so companies have compliance with the rules."
  • (6) EoN, and indeed other market participants in the generating sector, are hoping for a dissuasive sentencing to discourage similar such incidents in the future."
  • (7) The report, Drugs: International Comparators, documents in great detail the experience of Portugal, where personal use was decriminalised nearly 11 years ago and those arrested for drugs are given the choice of going before a health “dissuasion commission” or facing a criminal justice process.
  • (8) The UK chief executive of energy giant E.ON repeatedly lobbied the then-energy secretary Ed Miliband and others over the sentencing of activists disrupting the company's power plants, warning that any failure to issue "dissuasive" sentences could "impact" upon investment decisions in the UK.
  • (9) That won’t put anyone off.” More confusing was the suggestion that UK Border Force officers would be visiting camps to provide migrants with a “more dissuasive and realistic sense of life” in the UK.
  • (10) Every Thursday, in the square below the presidential balcony, the "Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo" demonstrated, despite every dissuasion, that the disappeared would never be forgotten until justice was done.
  • (11) These actions are having a dissuasive effect on protesters, said the organisation.
  • (12) It does not cover specific drug therapies for alcoholism (aversion, chemical restraint, dissuasion), nor nonspecific drug therapies (vitamins, magnesium) the interest and limits of which are well known.
  • (13) Dissuasion and inappropriate advice from doctors significantly delayed diagnosis in 25% of all cases.
  • (14) During the medical follow up, with the help of specialized functional tests, the physician may detect a state of overtraining and start a dissuasive action against doping habits.
  • (15) It also provides that such measures must be “effective, proportionate and dissuasive”.
  • (16) • Piloting a system used in Portugal, where drug use has been decriminalised, which involves “dissuasion commissions” assessing drug users and diverting them from the criminal justice system and into treatment.

Words possibly related to "dissuasion"

Words possibly related to "dissuasive"