0 present participle of incite
1 to encourage someone to do or feel something unpleasant or violent:
She incited racial hatred by distributing anti-Semitic leaflets.
[ + to infinitive ] She was expelled for inciting her classmates to rebel against their teachers.
But it has its risks, which include inciting others to make their judgements just as strongly and publicly - especially the academic linguists.
But every propaganda campaign inciting women to cast off their veils, from the 1930s + 1940s to the 1950 + 1960s, was a failure.
In addition, the law forbids that benefits are granted with the purpose of inciting switching.
In equilibrium models, political processes are dominated by negative feedback, with perturbations inciting countervailing pressures that bring politics back into equilibrium.
At first, the ruling power was considered responsible for inciting an armed confrontation by letting the opposition emerge.
What is the pur pose of inciting wonder, or simply being interesting?
Even conservative governments intellectually committed to de-ationary measures hesitated to stay the course for fear of inciting a political backlash.
Paying scant attention to reality, the bureaucrats wrongly held litigation masters and their activities of inciting and proxy responsible in large part for generating this litigious tendency.