The Latin incitare which means to spur or urge on
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.
the origin is where the word came from but the specific origin of the word ballot is latin root word.
The origin is from french
The origin of the word calliope: from Greek word: kalliope; meaning "beautiful voiced"
The answer is it's a british word origin. The word was orriginaly made by the English society
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.
stir, fuel, urge, goad, push, prod
the origin is where the word came from but the specific origin of the word ballot is latin root word.
The word "origin" is derived from the French word "origin" and the Latin word "originem," both of which mean, beginning, descent, birth, and rise.
where was the word colonel origin
There is no such word as diaster and so no origin word.
A homonym for insight is incite.
The origin of the word data is Latin ....
the origin of the word bucket is bu-cket
The origin of the word 'Snog' or 'Snogging' is England :)
The origin of the word phenomenon is Greek or Latin.
The word "stimuli" comes from the Latin word "stimulus," which means goad or pointed stick. It is used in English to refer to things that provoke a reaction or response in a biological or psychological context.