incite
/ɪnˈsaɪt/ (bre, ipa) · /ɪnˈsaɪt/ (ame, ipa) · /in-ˈsīt/ (ame, mw)
incite — 動詞
- incitepresent simple I / you / we / they
- inciteshe / she / it
- incitedpast simple
- inciting-ing form
1. to stir up strong negative emotion in people, or push them into harmful or angry
煽動;挑起
鼓動他人做出激烈或有害的行為
to stir up strong negative emotion in people, or push them into harmful or angry action, often through speeches, posts, or rumours.
Police arrested Cyrus for trying to incite the crowd to attack the courthouse.
警方逮捕了 Cyrus,因為他試圖煽動群眾攻擊法院。
incite + somebody + to + verb (push into harmful action)
The radio host was fined for posts that seemed to incite violence against migrant workers.
那位廣播主持人因為發文似乎在煽動針對移工的暴力行為而被罰款。
collocation: incite violence / hatred / a riot
Marta accused her former boss of inciting the staff to quit on the same day.
Marta 指控前老闆煽動員工在同一天集體辭職。
Several fans were arrested for inciting a riot during the championship match in Lisbon.
好幾名球迷因為在里斯本冠軍賽中挑起暴動而遭到逮捕。
Nikhil was warned that his angry messages on the group chat could incite a fight at school.
Nikhil 被警告,他在群組裡的憤怒訊息可能會在學校挑起一場打架。
- provoke
broader; can trigger any strong reaction (anger, laughter, thought), while 'incite' targets harmful action.
- instigate
very close in meaning; often used for starting a planned wrongdoing (a coup, a fight) rather than swaying a crowd.
- stir up
informal everyday equivalent; preferred in spoken English when 'incite' would sound too legal or formal.
- rouse
wakes feelings or action in people but is neutral about whether the outcome is good or bad.
文法句型
incite + somebody + to + verb
incite + noun (riot / violence / hatred)
用法筆記
Object is almost always something unwanted (violence, a riot, hatred, panic) or a person being pushed into such action. Frequently appears in legal and news contexts; in everyday speech, native speakers usually say 'stir up', 'provoke', or 'egg on' instead.