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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Empassion

Empassion \Em*pas"sion\, v. t. To move with passion; to affect strongly. See Impassion.

Those sights empassion me full near.
--Spenser.

Wiktionary
empassion

vb. (obsolete form of impassion English)

Usage examples of "empassion".

But one empassioned look from the insidious Laurentina, one word from her, uttered in the tremulous accents of genuine affection, were sufficient to silence the eloquent pleadings of reason, and to stifle the impulses of virtue and compassion.

While the houses of parliament in England were yet echoing with the oratory of its empassioned members, the hillsides of America were reverberating with peals of musketry.

She gasped and dropped to one knee, humbled by the power and majesty of her deity, thrilled and empassioned by his invincible strength.

AND THE First Speaker's voice projected sharply through the startled hubbub caused by Third's empassioned peroration, "we abandon the planet now, with no logical explanation for the disappearance -- and I see no logical explanation short of killing our people outright and leaving their bodies to be found .

I don't mean there was more than the usual body thrashing and hair-tossing and empassioned vocalizing from The Monkey-no, the drama was at the same Wagnerian pitch I was beginning to become accustomed to: it was the flow of feeling that was new and terrific.

AND THE First Speaker's voice projected sharply through the startled hubbub caused by Third's empassioned peroration, "we abandon the planet now, with no logical explanation for the disappearance -- and I see no logical explanation short of killing our people outright and leaving their bodies to be found.