9022 examples of excites in sentences

As in most of these couplets, it is the guilty one who excites the interest: "The Christian oppresses.

The poetic talent of the Touareg women, and the use they make of this giftwhich they employ to celebrate or to rail at, with the accompaniment of their one-stringed violin, that which excites their admiration or inspires them with disdainis a stimulant for warriors: "That which spurs me to battle is a word of scorn, And the fear of the eternal malediction Of God, and the circles of the young Maidens with their violins.

At the same time the mother frequently relaxes in the punctuality of the regimen imposed on her, and, taking some unusual or different food, excites diarrhoea or irritation in her child's stomach, which not unfrequently results in a rash on the skin, or slight febrile symptoms, which, if not subdued in their outset, superinduce some more serious form of infantine disease.

But when medicinally used, it excites a reaction on the surface equivalent to a stimulating effect; as in some cases of fever, when the body has been sponged with cold water, it excites, by reaction, increased circulation on the skin.

But when medicinally used, it excites a reaction on the surface equivalent to a stimulating effect; as in some cases of fever, when the body has been sponged with cold water, it excites, by reaction, increased circulation on the skin.

From hence it is evident that the thing which excites the sense is something incorporeal.

Chapter V. There is something in the season of Spring which peculiarly excites the feelings of devotion.

By this straightforward simplicity all the interest which intricacy excites was of necessity disregarded.

Can you mention any particular act, that excites your suspicion?" "Don't the captain think Nick may have had suthin' to do with the desartions?A dozen men would scarce desart all at once, as it might be, onless someone was at the bottom of it.

Whenever, then, man creates an image or a picture which reveals these eternal but indescribable beauties, and calls forth wonder or enthusiasm, and excites refined pleasures, he is an artist.

But excess of heat excites or stimulates the skin, causing an unnatural degree of perspiration, and thus inducing weakness or debility.

This forbidding children to rise early, and threatening them if they do, sometimes excites their curiosity, and leads them to the forbidden course of conduct, simply because it is forbidden.

He would send men to death with a jest, and the cold-blooded, calculating, remorseless infamy of his entire career excites a repulsion which we feel for no other great figure in history, not even for the first Napoleon.

The delicious smell excites him like draughts of rich old wine, and all the soul within him bubbles up exultingly, and he improvises on the moment.

His fate excites universal sympathy, and I have seen many people shed tears when talking on this subject.

All too little is known about this friend of Catullus and Cinna, but what is known excites a keen interest.

It acts as a talisman on the inmost feelings of the soul, and excites them to activity; which should be the constant aim of all persons engaged in the important work of education.

For an oration becomes agreeable when you say anything unexpected, or unheard of, or novel, for whatever excites wonder gives pleasure.

And when the reply is, "Majesty consists of the dignity of the empire and name of the Roman people, which that man impairs, who excites sedition by appealing to the violent passions of the multitude;" then comes the dispute, Whether his conduct was calculated to impair that majesty, who acted upon the inclinations of the roman people, so as to do a thing which was both just and acceptable to them by means of violence.

Hodges listened to the recital with great attention, and at its close said, "This is a very singular affair, and excites my curiosity greatly.

Mr. F.W. Shearman, the able and ingenious editor of the Journal of Education, writes from Marshall, that it receives an increased circulation and excites a deeper interest in the people, with his plans for further improvements. 16th.

If to rob men of rights excites their hate, freely to restore them and make amends, will win their love.

Perhaps no man has lived in modern times, whose name excites such horror as that of Robespierre.

'Liberty,' he remarks, 'is the nurse of true genius; it animates the spirit, and invigorates the hopes, of men; it excites honourable emulation, and a desire of excelling in every art.

Apaches and anarchists might be inflamed with the madness of blood which excites men in time of war.

9022 examples of  excites  in sentences