exhort 的 2 个定义
- to urge, advise, or caution earnestly; admonish urgently.
- to give urgent advice, recommendations, or warnings.
exhort 近义词
urge, warn
更多exhort例句
- On the one hand, she says, exhorting people to “keep wearing a mask” implies that a vaccinated person can still transmit the virus.
- In the hour before the joint session of Congress convened in the House chamber, the president was exhorting a mass of supporters with one more recitation of his baseless claims of a stolen election and much else.
- Amon is known as an early riser who likes getting to the office first to exhort his research, marketing, and sales teams to work hard.
- Last year, people who exhorted others to stay positive and make goals and keep moving forward became grating.
- The cryptocurrency giant Coinbase has been in a media firestorm since its outspoken CEO Brian Armstrong published a blog post two weeks ago exhorting employees to refrain from politics in the workplace.
- They did not baldly call for a coup, but they did exhort soldiers to “take a stand.”
- He is also trying to inspire, cajole, exhort, or shame us Catholics and others of goodwill into living our calling.
- In the offices of Facebook posters exhort employees to take risks.
- Their voices amplified by PA systems, the protests' leaders exhort their audiences with rigidly ideological slogans.
- Sivert Jespersen began at once to exhort him to allow himself to be sent on a mission to the heathen lands lying in darkness.
- Without offending your commands permit a lover to exhort me to live in obedience to your rigorous rules.
- Sometimes during the night he would walk to another bedside, wake up its occupant, and exhort him to prayer.
- Because I exhort you to mutual love you are not to think that I have gone back on my teaching of justification by faith alone.
- Robert Davis soon afterward felt the inspiration to teach and exhort and he was much used in this way.