Provoke, goad, stimulate, egg on, spur, motivate
The noun forms of the verb to incite are incitement and the gerund, inciting.
Provoke, Rouse or Goad.
No. It is not an adjective. An adjective describes something.
Yes, it is an adjective.
No it's not a adjective, an adjective is a describing word.
Yes, it is an adjective. it is the comparative form of the adjective 'scary.'
The adjective is cloudless. It describes the sky.
A homonym for insight is incite.
"Incite" is a regular verb; therefore, "incited".
The Incite Mill was created on 2010-10-16.
incite means not excited and excite means excited
Yes, it can be, to mean punctual, or done without delay (a prompt response, prompt employees). It can also be a verb (meaning to incite, inspire, or remind), or a noun for a warning or reminder.
LG Incite has WiFi - always a big bonus. LG Incite has Windows - smaller icons. Big difference when deciding.
Evocative is an adjective describing something that brings about strong imagery or feelings. So, an evocative argument would be one meant to incite feelings rather than appealing to logic.
Incite a rebellion against the British Incite the mob to stone him to death, he would have to be murdered as secretly as possible. The most spectacular failure was a power supply glitch, all the magic smoke leaked out, luckily it didn't incite anything else.
quell.
in order for antigens to incite the immune response the y must be ?
I'm guessing incite is like, in a website and insight is like in your seeing range?
No. Incite is a verb. EX: He was going to incite a riot with his speech against the government. The noun version is incitement. EX: After his speech calling for attacks on the government and the police, he was arrested for incitement to riot. It cannot be a pronoun.