During Caesar's funeral, Antony made accusations against the conspirators who were behind Caesar's murder and named and shamed them. He also read Caesar's will which left most of his property to the people. The people became enraged and rioted. Caesar had been very popular with the middle and lower classes. He was seen as the champion of the people.
Marc Antony did not change Caesar's will. At Caesar's funeral he read Caesar's will. Caesar's bequeathed a sum of 300 sesterces to every man in Rome and donated his gardens as public parks. Caesar also adopted Octavian and made him his heir. Mark Antony seized Caesar's money which was held at the temple of Ops. Octavian planned to accept his inheritance. Antony disapproved of this. When Octavian demanded his inheritance Marc Antony, who was the consul (head of the Republic), refused to give it to him, saying that it was public money and that it had been spent in the interests of the Roman state. He also had not disbursed Caesar's promised bequeath to the people Therefore, Octavian paid this bequest out of his own money by selling his estate and borrowing money from friend to humiliate Marc Antony and increase his own popularity. When Octavian forced the senate to nominate him consuls with the use of military threat, he was in a position of political strength with which he could get his inheritance.
In Mark Antony's speech from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, the term "butchers" refers to the conspirators who assassinated Julius Caesar. Antony uses this term to evoke the image of brutality and betrayal, highlighting the treachery of those who killed Caesar, whom he portrays as a noble figure. By calling them butchers, Antony seeks to incite the crowd's anger and sway public opinion against the conspirators. This rhetorical strategy emphasizes the moral decay of the assassins in contrast to Caesar's character.
they tried to incite a revolution... apex(;
The Austrians incite a rebellion against the Ottomans in Bulgaria.
Cassius tells Brutus that allowing Antony to speak at Caesar's funeral could be dangerous because Antony is a powerful speaker and may turn the crowd against them by reminding them of Caesar's good deeds. Cassius warns that Antony could incite the crowd to rebel against the conspirators.
An example of hyperbole in Julius Caesar is in Act 3, Scene 2, when Mark Antony delivers his famous funeral oration for Caesar. Antony exaggerates Caesar's virtues and the extent of his betrayal by the conspirators, using hyperbolic language to incite the crowd's emotions and turn them against Brutus and the other assassins. This rhetorical device is used to emphasize the magnitude of Caesar's greatness and the injustice of his murder, effectively swaying public opinion in Antony's favor.
By calling Caesar's assassins "honorable men" repeatedly during the funeral oration, he convinces the listeners that they acted dishonorably, and, by holding up Caesar's bloodstained robe, and showing the numerous knife cuts, it is comparable to showing Caesar's mutilated body.
During Caesar's funeral, Antony made accusations against the conspirators who were behind Caesar's murder and named and shamed them. He also read Caesar's will which left most of his property to the people. The people became enraged and rioted. Caesar had been very popular with the middle and lower classes. He was seen as the champion of the people.
A homonym for insight is incite.
Marc Antony did not change Caesar's will. At Caesar's funeral he read Caesar's will. Caesar's bequeathed a sum of 300 sesterces to every man in Rome and donated his gardens as public parks. Caesar also adopted Octavian and made him his heir. Mark Antony seized Caesar's money which was held at the temple of Ops. Octavian planned to accept his inheritance. Antony disapproved of this. When Octavian demanded his inheritance Marc Antony, who was the consul (head of the Republic), refused to give it to him, saying that it was public money and that it had been spent in the interests of the Roman state. He also had not disbursed Caesar's promised bequeath to the people Therefore, Octavian paid this bequest out of his own money by selling his estate and borrowing money from friend to humiliate Marc Antony and increase his own popularity. When Octavian forced the senate to nominate him consuls with the use of military threat, he was in a position of political strength with which he could get his inheritance.
It depends on what speech. If you are referring to Mark Antony's speech at Julius Caesar's funeral, his intention was to incite the crowd against the assassins of Caesar and to present himself as the leader of the Caesarian faction (the supporters of Caesar's policies).
In Mark Antony's speech from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, the term "butchers" refers to the conspirators who assassinated Julius Caesar. Antony uses this term to evoke the image of brutality and betrayal, highlighting the treachery of those who killed Caesar, whom he portrays as a noble figure. By calling them butchers, Antony seeks to incite the crowd's anger and sway public opinion against the conspirators. This rhetorical strategy emphasizes the moral decay of the assassins in contrast to Caesar's character.
"Incite" is a regular verb; therefore, "incited".
The Incite Mill was created on 2010-10-16.
incite means not excited and excite means excited
LG Incite has WiFi - always a big bonus. LG Incite has Windows - smaller icons. Big difference when deciding.