Eating too quickly or too much, an irritation in the stomach or the throat or feeling nervous or excited can irritate the phrenic nerve and cause hiccups. Certain diseases and damage to the nerve can also cause them.
Yes, because an atom in an excited state will normally give off energy and go to a less-excited state or to its ground state. Some atoms have long-lived excited states and are called "metastable".
Electrons can be excited in an element by supplying energy to the molecule of the elements. Further eletrons get excited in chemical reactions
When the electrons are at higher energy level,they are said to be excited state.
In photosynthesis, the electrons from the chlorophyll are excited by the sunlight
Can I use 'roused'? Well anyway, here are two for roused: I roused out of bed. He was roused to action by corageous words - not my sentence.
Coffee gets you hyperactive and alert; it may get you excited cause of the caffeine.
Awakenings.
The word roused is a past tense of the word rouse. The word means to awaken and bring out of a state of sleep. An sample sentence would be, ÒHe was roused from sleep by the loud gun shotsÓ.
Sometimes you'll shiver when you're excited or afraid. Out messages through your body that cause your muscles to get excited, so you shiver.
"Roused" is not a mathematical term. 923 ROUNDED to the nearest hundred is 900.
"Roused" is not a mathematical term. 248 ROUNDED to the nearest hundred is 200.
That is not an idiom. It means exactly what it says, that someone was roused to eternal wakefulness. You might need a dictionary instead.
Fierce when roused
Roused is a verb: Bring out of sleep; awaken: "she was roused from a deep sleep by a hand on her shoulder".
My cousin makes me want to rouse things up when i she tells me her eight grade prank.
This is not an idiom. It means just what it sounds like it means -- somebody was roused into eternal wakefulness. You just need a dictionary, I suppose.