Let us, however, leave him alone, whether he go or remain, for he will fight again at that time when his mind within his breast urges, and the Deity incites him.
Nevertheless, it incites the fear of the Californians and induces them to adopt more stringent measures against the Japanese living in that State.
Such a policy of nationalism inevitably incites the suspicion of countries to which Japanese immigrants go, and discourages the people from making an attempt at assimilating the Japanese.
And yet they form the world of our children, in which they are constrained to "consume" their potential powers in a continuous exasperation, which incites them to destroy things.
Illustration: John Inciteshis Countrymen to Harass the Romans.
Being a woman, she dislikes the sight of human blood, and when it is spilled upon the face of the earth she incites the huge serpent to wreathe itself around the pillars and shake the world to its foundations.
An intelligent trust in Providence, however, incites a man to do his own full duty, and it is the better men who do the most to avert future evils from their families.
He is essentially the mediator of the action of creatures in both orders; since the same action by which all things are made to exist, and to continue in existence through him, incites them to action and aids them to develop their faculties.
It inspires them with courage and incites them to actions utterly foreign to their shrinking dispositions.
Envy incites in us a desire to possess the good fortune that we discover falling to others.
It not only shows the way of all progress, but it incites you to go forward.
That which incites the mind, or moves to action; motive; incentive; impulse.
That whichincites to action; that which rouses or prompts; incitement; motive; incentive.
Don Pedro incites the inquisitors to deny the truth of the story, at which Vasco breaks out in such a furious rage against them that he is arrested and thrown into a dungeon.
One who, or that which, prompts; one who admonishes or incites to action.
Then he incites and cries to him, as he would do to hunting-dogs.
For him to prove himself, it is enough that he choose a domicile in souls which he ulcerates and incites to inexplicable crimes.
But they will not do the things to which the flesh incites them.
When Paul declares that "the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh," he means to say that we are not to think, speak or do the things to which the flesh incites us.
This thought incites to a more exalted worship and self-abnegation.
Wake, Thomas, Lord, incitesthe citizens to join the Earl of Lancaster in revolt, i, 164.
Let us march, and that fear which incites desertion will free my army from cowards.
What both you spur and stop] What it is that at once incites you to speak, and restrains you from it.
Hence it comes that he often breaks men's necks or drives them to insanity, drowns some, andincites many to commit suicide, and to many other terrible calamities.
Ferdinand Martinez incites the mob against the Jews of Seville.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "incites" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.