0 past simple and past participle of exhort --
1 to strongly encourage or try to persuade someone to do something: --
But something about the 'tone', as he put it afterwards (not a phonologist), moved him to respond as if the voice had exhorted him to do something against his will.
The government built creches and canteens, extended its range of maternity institutions and exhorted the nation to greater efforts for the sake of socialist society, its wealth and its welfare.
Clergy exhorted their fellows to examine their flocks before communion and reject the unworthy.
Readers are finally exhorted to move to a moral economy of long-term care in order to maximise the possibility of a decent life for people throughout their lives.
Kiyoi recently exhorted them to do in these pages.
We are strenuously exhorted to define the research question in 'greater detail' (p. 159) and, above all, to replicate studies in order to verify results.
He called for support not only from the clerical, but also from the secular magistrates, when he exhorted that witches not be allowed to live.
It is one which other ecclesiastical archivists can only be exhorted to follow.