motivator 的定义
mo·ti·vat·ed, mo·ti·vat·ing.
- to provide with a motive, or a cause or reason to act; incite; impel.
motivator 近义词
等同于 prime mover
等同于 doer
等同于 gadfly
更多motivator例句
- That was a lot of work on motivating and understanding kids.
- The acquisition was likely motivated by several factors, among them the need to get bigger to better compete with market leader Foursquare.
- It can be used to show tangible improvement for users and to motivate a population that can find it hard to exercise regularly.
- It is hard to motivate young students who feel their future is already written for them.
- Silver’s rally has been motivated by many of the same market factors that have driven gold prices to historic highs this year.
- Being reminded that economic and social conditions are not improving at the pace one expected can be a powerful motivator.
- The thing is, surprise is still a huge motivator for readers.
- And new evidence shows the cause is a turnout motivator for Democratic base voters.
- I meant the age-old motivator, fear—stoking fear in their base of what a Republican Senate would look like.
- The unique 2008 election aside, fear is a much better motivator in politics than hope.
- By the Universal Motivator, these predators had eaten a hurkle apiece!
- The World had been excellently designed by the Universal Motivator for the development and evolution of life.