INCITEMENT
\ɪnsˈa͡ɪtmənt], \ɪnsˈaɪtmənt], \ɪ_n_s_ˈaɪ_t_m_ə_n_t]\
Definitions of INCITEMENT
- 2006 - WordNet 3.0
- 2011 - English Dictionary Database
- 2010 - New Age Dictionary Database
- 1913 - Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary
- 1919 - The Winston Simplified Dictionary
- 1899 - The american dictionary of the english language.
- 1919 - The Concise Standard Dictionary of the English Language
- 1871 - The Cabinet Dictionary of the English Language
- 1790 - A Complete Dictionary of the English Language
Sort: Oldest first
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the act of exhorting; an earnest attempt at persuasion
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something that incites or provokes; a means of arousing or stirring to action
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an act of urging on or spurring on or rousing to action or instigating; "the incitement of mutiny"
By Princeton University
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the act of exhorting; an earnest attempt at persuasion
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something that incites or provokes; a means of arousing or stirring to action
By DataStellar Co., Ltd
By Oddity Software
By Noah Webster.
By William Dodge Lewis, Edgar Arthur Singer
By Daniel Lyons
By James Champlin Fernald
Word of the day
sir richard blackmore
- An English physician poet; born in Wiltshire about 1650; died 1729. Besides medical works, Scripture paraphrases, satirical verse, he wrote Popian couplets "Prince Arthur, a Heroic Poem"(1695), and voluminous religious epic, "The Creation"(1712), very successful much praised then, but not now read.