urge+forward

  • 61hustle — verb (hustled; hustling) Etymology: Dutch husselen to shake, from Middle Dutch hutselen, frequentative of hutsen Date: 1720 transitive verb 1. a. jostle, shove b. to convey forcibly or hurriedly c. to urge forward precipitately …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 62instigate — transitive verb ( gated; gating) Etymology: Latin instigatus, past participle of instigare more at stick Date: 1542 to goad or urge forward ; provoke Synonyms: see incite • instigation noun • instigative adjective …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 63Dispositio — See also: Disposition (disambiguation) Part of a series of articles on Rhetoric The five canons: Inventio Dispositio Elocutio Memoria Pronuntiatio Dispositio is the system used for the organization of arguments in Western classical rhetoric. The… …

    Wikipedia

  • 64Protreptic — is a mode of classical rhetoric associated originally with the Sophists who used this style in speeches for recruiting students. The philosopher would achieve this end by discussing the fallacies and deficiencies of rival schools while extolling… …

    Wikipedia

  • 65ca' — /kah, kaw/, v.t., v.i. Scot. to call, as to call an animal toward one; urge forward by calling. [var. of CALL] * * * …

    Universalium

  • 66hurry — hurryingly, adv. /herr ee, hur ee/, v., hurried, hurrying, n., pl. hurries. v.i. 1. to move, proceed, or act with haste (often fol. by up): Hurry, or we ll be late. Hurry up, it s starting to rain. v.t. 2. to drive, carry, or cause to move or… …

    Universalium

  • 67impel — /im pel /, v.t., impelled, impelling. 1. to drive or urge forward; press on; incite or constrain to action. 2. to drive or cause to move onward; propel; impart motion to. [1375 1425; late ME impellen < L impellere to strike against, set in motion …

    Universalium

  • 68whig — 1. noun /ʍɪɡ/ a) Acidulated whey, sometimes mixed with buttermilk and sweet herbs, used as a cooling beverage. b) buttermilk 2. verb /ʍɪɡ/ a) Urge forward; drive briskly …

    Wiktionary

  • 69compel, impel —  Both words imply the application of a force leading to some form of action, but they are not quite synonymous. Compel is the stronger of the two and, like its cousin compulsion, suggests action undertaken as a result of coercion or irresistible&#8230; …

    Bryson’s dictionary for writers and editors

  • 70Whig — British political party, 1657, in part perhaps a disparaging use of whigg a country bumpkin (1640s); but mainly a shortened form of Whiggamore (1649) one of the adherents of the Presbyterian cause in western Scotland who marched on Edinburgh in&#8230; …

    Etymology dictionary