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Answer for the clue "Stimulus ", 7 letters:
impetus

Alternative clues for the word impetus

Word definitions for impetus in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Impetus \Im"pe*tus\ ([i^]m"p[-e]*t[u^]s), n. [L., fr. impetere to rush upon, attack; pref. im- in + petere to fall upon, seek. See Petition .] A property possessed by a moving body in virtue of its weight and its motion; the force with which any body is ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a force that moves something along [syn: drift , impulsion ] the act of applying force suddenly; "the impulse knocked him over" [syn: impulse , impulsion ]

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Impetus may refer to: A source of motivation Theory of impetus , a concept very similar to momentum Impetus (album) , a re-release of the EP Passive Restraints impetus Technologies , a privately held technology company specializing in software product development, ...

Usage examples of impetus.

I would hope that such would prove an impetus to the dwarves who claim to be our neighbors.

But the fire had long since burned out, and the gray false dawn was cold, adding impetus to their movements as they hurriedly changed their clothes and left the cabin for Eucher Butte.

I am confident that the publication of the Gujrati version together with these and the Burmese translations, will reinforce the impetus which the projected visit of Mrs.

This event gave the Koreshan cult new impetus, and it survived into the 1940s.

Fein, Ambassador of the Netherlands to the United States, who gave the initial impetus by an invitation to address the Commemoration in 1985 of the fortieth anniversary of the liberation of the Netherlands.

The doctrine they taught provided both the opportunity and the impetus for the Ponapeans and Kusaieans to begin their recovery from the disasters of twenty years of close contact, with the result that both islands were substantially converted by the early 1860s.

In a flutelike voice, he sang of the sacred writings, or Vedas, composed well before the first millennium bc, and of the catalogue of magical yajnas, sacrificial formulas, mantras, and rituals that the Vedic religion embodied, and of the many schools, sects, and religions that had developed through the centuries: Sankhya, Yoga, Vedanta, Vaishnavas, Shaivas, Shak-tas, all of which were preached and practised under the separate canopies of Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism, which in turn took their impetus from the original Vedic, changing and refining the basic precepts into a multiplicity of separate doctrines : Karma, avatar, samsara, dharma, trimurti, bhakti, maya.

Tibet are said to have restored the religion in Lhasa at the end of the tenth century, but it was the patronage of the western kingdom of Gu-ge with its capital at Tsaparang that gave the most powerful impetus to what is called the Second Diffusion of the religion, which from then onward became centred in the monasteries, the larger of which, well endowed and populous, began to play the part of landowner and noble in the political and economic structure of a fragmented and decentralised country.

Out of the ruptured sea rose a vast wave that radiated outward in all directions and which crashed against the cliffs of the erupting coastline in a blast of hissing vapor which at once cooled and heated and poured yet more impetus into the towering plume rising above the land.

But once the work was in progress, an unforeseeable twist of direction took place: I realized that the quotations by themselves were imbued with an extraordinary impetus.

We have no schools, but from our race come pouring at the briefest intervals the innumerable swarms of our children, merrily lisping or chirping so long as they cannot yet pipe, rolling or tumbling along by sheer impetus so long as they cannot yet run, clumsily carrying everything before them by mass weight so long as they cannot yet see, our children!

Maybe the real impetus for them to colonise is that their sun's old and dying.

When we had risen we performed, all three together, ablutions which made them laugh a good deal, and which gave a new impetus to the ardour of our feelings.

This sacrifice had given a new impetus to my love for this charming woman, and I felt a sort of spasm, which made me afraid I should get ill.

In Britain, the Society for Interdisciplinary Studies was founded under the impetus of Howard Tresman and puts out the journal Chronology and Catastrophism Review, besides hosting a regular program of workshops and conferences.