(n.) The act of practice of exhorting; the act of inciting to laudable deeds; incitement to that which is good or commendable.
(n.) Language intended to incite and encourage; advice; counsel; admonition.
Example Sentences:
(1) The exhortations, quite direct exhortations, were coming from an Australian who is apparently quite senior in Isil [Islamic State] to networks of support back in Australia to conduct demonstration killings here in this country.” Azari is being held in solitary confinement at the state’s super maximum security prison in Goulburn.
(2) Analysis of the videotapes revealed that the coaches (n = 11) at the bantam level often exhort their players to put more intensity in their physical contacts (legal body checking), but they more often encouraged them to control themselves and avoid penalties.
(3) At the end of the corridor is a presentation room, the walls bedaubed with exhortations to “Never, Never, Never Give Up”; up another staircase is a run of seminar rooms, in one of which a class of fledgling baristas are learning their trade.
(4) This cannot be done by throwing a traditionally trained doctor into such a setting and exhorting him to lead.
(5) This fact, the limited applicability of the information obtained from animal experiments, and the further fact that even test results obtained in human subjects cannot be applied on a world-wide basis, exhort us to take care not to subscribe to an all-too apodictic classification of therapeutic measures into effective and noneffective.
(6) When Johnson or Congressman Earl Blumenauer – who is pushing for extension and reform of the Siv programs – talk about the situation, their articulate exhortations carry undertones of angst.
(7) He exhorts him instead to "rage, rage against the dying of the light".
(8) These people stand at the edges of our avenues, of our streets, in deafening anonymity.” The passionate exhortation came hours after he addressed the United Nations , prayed at Ground Zero, visited a school in Harlem and cruised through Central Park, where 80,000 people greeted the 78-year-old Argentinean with rapture.
(9) The doctor, however, is charged against all exhortations of social Darwinism by society to help his patient to the best of his knowledge and skill.
(10) Shafik is clearly frustrated that years of exhortations against bank misbehaviour have yet to trigger genuine cultural change.
(11) They were on their feet between nearly every point, screaming with such manic intensity it was impossible to make out a word of their exhortations.
(12) Oh soldiers of the Islamic State , continue to harvest the [enemy] soldiers,” the recording exhorted in a key passage.
(13) Hence in casting their votes and electing members for the parliament, we urge and exhort them not to support pseudo-political leaders who betray our Tamil cause for liberation but to support candidates or parties who are loyal to the fundamental aspirations of all the Tamils within and outside of Sri Lanka."
(14) The Ukip leader, tongue firmly lodged in cheek, has recorded a “party political broadcast” on behalf of Paddy Power , exhorting punters to get behind Team Europe in this weekend’s Ryder Cup golf contest against the US.
(15) The tablet, inscribed with an exhortation to honor King Tukulti-Ninurta I, was excavated a century ago by German archaeologists from the Ishtar Temple in what's now northern Iraq.
(16) But we cannot wait for exhortations from an intergovernmental meeting before making the right choices concerning our £800m investment portfolio.
(17) Modern life is awash with tips on how to live well, exhorting us to practice gratitude, discover meaning and ponder our legacy.
(18) To soberly face our situation and begin the hard, slow-burning, patient work of reconstruction, or continue to rally to sloganistic exhortations, thinking that each new protest or strike might radically shift the balance in our favour?
(19) Five Leaves Left is one of those albums that seem tied to exhorting and then playing on a particular mood in the listener – like Astral Weeks and Forever Changes certainly and arguably stationed on that particular echelon of creativity (though I wouldn’t personally like to enter into that particular argument).
(20) It said it would look in particular at "whether these games include 'direct exhortations' to children – a strong encouragement to make a purchase, or to do something that will necessitate making a purchase, or to persuade their parents or other adults to make a purchase for them".
Monition
Definition:
(n.) Instruction or advice given by way of caution; an admonition; a warning; a caution.
(n.) Information; indication; notice; advice.
(n.) A process in the nature of a summons to appear and answer.
(n.) An order monishing a party complained against to obey under pain of the law.
Example Sentences:
(1) In dogs anesthetized with pentobarbital-chloralose, cardiac output and blood flows of four regional vascular beds (superior mesenteric, left renal, left circumflex coronary and left femoral) were continuously monitered with electromagnetic flowmeters.
(2) From a detailed analysis of these data, the following results were concluded: In some cases, the intramedullary and extramedullary pontine tumor could be differentiated by ABR, A very small cerebello-pontine angle tumor was detected by ABR, ABR monitering was useful to evaluate brainstem function during the surgical operation, and ABRS were clinically very useful methods for predicting the outcome of a severe head injury and diagnosis of brain death.
(3) Clinical signs, body weight, food and water consumption were monitered, and hematological, blood biochemical, ophthalmological and histopathological examination were carried out.
(4) The actions of the GB, SO and duodenum were monitered by cinecholecystocholangiogrphy combined with manometry of the SO area using a hydraulic-capillary infusion system or MIKRO-TIP, and these were correlated with the plasma concentrations of GI hormones.
(5) The subjects went to sleep at their usual times and sleep patterns were monitered polygraphically.
(6) This was possibly caused by the formation of a soluble monite precipitate.
(7) The technique monitered changes in contractility produced by small doses of adrenaline, digoxin, acetylcholine and CaCl2.
(8) Sequential development of electron miscrosopic changes in the rabbit parathyroid gland was monitered during induction of parathyroiditis by 48 hours of ozone 0.75 ppm dosage regimen.
(9) Analysis of 5575 settings on a computer-monitered Theratron-80 60Co unit demonstrates that human error does occur in treating patients with radiation.
(10) The results suggest that monitering urinary dopamine and 3-methoxytyramine excretion in Tourette's disease may predict the clinical response to pharmacotherapy, and that a dopaminergic mechanism may be associated with this type of motor hyperkinesia.
(11) SAFP is not only diagnostic but also prognostic by monitering postoperative course.
(12) We have concluded that intraoperative ESP monitering is a more reliable indicator of the spinal cord ischemia than other methods previously reported.
(13) Nuclear and mitochondrial DNA replication were monitered during the development of synchronous yeast zygotes.
(14) The measurement of whole blood CL was useful for monitering the phagocytic functions of blood after granulocyte transfusion.
(15) Secondly, ESP was used for the moniter of spinal cord ischemia during operation on 13 patients.
(16) The evoked spinal cord potential was used for the moniter of the spinal cord ischemia during the operation on the thoracic aorta.
(17) Scamman (J Clin Monit 1988; 4:227-229) found that when the respiratory frequency is high, as with infants, the CO2 signal from the patient is unacceptably distorted during passage down the catheter.
(18) The activities of three enzymes present in soil, phosphatases, urease, and decarboxylase, were monitered as indicators of the loss of biochemical information occurring when soil was sterilized by dry heat (0.08% relative humidity), gamma radiation, or a combination of both.