Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Book about the writer's stirring ", 7 letters:
emotive

Alternative clues for the word emotive

Word definitions for emotive in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Emotive \E*mo"tive\, a. Attended by, or having the character of, emotion. --H. Brooke. -- E*mo"tive*ly , adv.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Emotive may refer to: Emotive (sociology) , a sociological term eMOTIVe , a 2004 rock album by A Perfect Circle Emotiv , a company which develops mind-computer interfaces

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. 1 of, or relating to emotion 2 appealing to one's emotions

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
adjective COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADVERB highly ▪ Our observation of these, as recordings of the frozen energy of nature, can be highly emotive . ▪ They are expressed in highly emotive language. ▪ Inevitably the issue has proved highly emotive: even ...

Usage examples of emotive.

Tawsar nor any of the other Wem within my emotive range are radiating feelings of hostility.

If the distinction which I formerly drew between the Scientific and the Artistic tendencies be accepted, it will disclose a corresponding difference in the Style which suits a ratiocinative exposition fixing attention on abstract relations, and an emotive exposition fixing attention on objects as related to the feelings.

Dolza, if Reno's report was to be believed, had subsequently elected to fold the entire armada to Earthspace, with designs to annihilate the planet before emotive contagion was spread to the remainder of the fleet.

This elicits the same emotive intensity as in regression or in Mack's abductee hypnosis.

I had witnessed them in furious disagreement on design issues, but you don't use emotive words like 'hate' about landscape gardening and room layouts.

Rivers and Borrow taught that neurophysiological processes in the mind-body, such as dreaming, promoted the integration of limbic system dramas, thus increasing awareness and encouraging cognitive and emotive areas to merge.

An avalanche of emotive and perceptual experience spread across a universe in which none of this had previously been known.

Bodies were straddling the court’s wrecked fittings, small orange fires gnawed hungrily at various jagged chunks of composite, and hatred was beaming through each of the doors like an emotive X ray.

Day establishes, if ever there was a doubt, that Arnold has the emotive ability of string cheese.