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  1. rope someone in. phrasal verb with rope verb [ T usually + adv/prep ] uk / rəʊp / us / roʊp / informal. Add to word list. to persuade someone to do something for you: At the last minute, we roped in a couple of spectators to complete the team. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Urging & persuading. ambulance-chasing. argumentation.

  2. Aug 26, 2023 · "Roped in" is a common idiom in English that means to lure, entice, or enlist someone into doing or participating in something, often by deception or coercion. In short: To "rope in" someone is to persuade or force them to participate or help in something they don't want to or don't like.

  3. If you say that you were roped in to do a particular task, you mean that someone persuaded you to help them do that task. Visitors were roped in to help pick tomatoes. American English : rope in / roʊp ˈɪn /

  4. Lure or entice someone into doing something, as in We didn't want to spend the night there, but we got roped in by my lonely aunt, or The salesman tried to rope us into buying some worthless real estate. These expressions allude to catching an animal by throwing a rope around it.

  5. To catch and draw something in with a rope or lasso: The cowboy roped in the stray calf. We set up a barrel and practiced roping it in with a lasso. 2. To recruit or enlist someone to participate: I roped in a few bystanders to help me fix the flat tire. She didn't want to go to the store with him, but he roped her in. See also: rope.

  6. phrasal verb. rope somebody in | rope somebody into something. [usually passive] (informal) to persuade somebody to join in an activity or to help to do something, even when they do not want to. be roped in to do something Everyone was roped in to help with the show.

  7. Rope in definition: to persuade to take part in some activity. See examples of ROPE IN used in a sentence.

  8. Definition of rope in phrasal verb in Oxford Advanced American Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. Lure or entice someone into doing something, as in We didn't want to spend the night there, but we got roped in by my lonely aunt, or The salesman tried to rope us into buying some worthless real estate. These expressions allude to catching an animal by throwing a rope around it.

  10. The most common meaning of the phrasal verb rope in is to ask or persuade someone to help with a task or activity. It often implies that the person being asked was not initially involved or interested in the task.