How To Use Agitate In A Sentence

  • Overhead, a mewing cry announced the passing of a white-tailed sea eagle, which was being mobbed by agitated gulls.
  • The limitations of the hegemonic strategy employed by Stuttgart were revealed beginning in 1796 when several Black Forest cantons agitated for reform to the ducal political system.
  • A cement mixer agitates the cement until it is ready to pour.
  • Initially, he was extremely agitated but had normal neurologic examination results.
  • It should not be confused with night terrors or panics, in which a child becomes acutely agitated and terror-struck at night, appearing to be awake while in fact asleep and unable to be woken.
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  • Agitate for the freedoms of everyone to worship as they please.
  • We were beset by swarms of agitated wasps.
  • Crude clays are blunged, sieved and passed over rare earth magnets, then stored in constantly agitated farm tanks.
  • Smith's style has an agitated energy that is nicely extended to the Chalfens, but it is rather unadaptable, or at least unadapted to the book's more nuanced characters, who are seen in the same constant light.
  • In many other healing temples for agitated people physical restraints are used, but they are not used here.
  • His expression agitated me so that I unconsciously rose to my feet and warned him off with my fan; but he seemed rooted to the spot. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 31, May, 1860
  • The unions continue to agitate for higher pay.
  • The doctor becalmed the agitated patient.
  • Agitate each mixture for 30 sec by flicking the container with a finger or a vibrator.
  • At three the following afternoon (everything running late), the Ambassador to Ix left the Throne Room looking agitated and splenetic. WICKED: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF THE WICKED WITCH OF THE WEST
  • Hers is a one-in-a-million case which results in her turning blue and stopping breathing whenever she becomes excited or agitated.
  • Though evidently representing the same individual, the head was much calmer than that of the agitated portrait of the previous decade.
  • She started to grow agitated at the sight of the spider.
  • All you need to do is gently agitate the water with a finger or paintbrush.
  • But if the folks who take cinema seriously were so willing to agitate against colorization, where are they now?
  • He said Miss Hegarty, who is in her late 20s, was in the road near the crashed car in an agitated state.
  • It's on much dodgier ground when it uses its muscle to agitate on wider social issues. Times, Sunday Times
  • As China convenes its Parliament this week, its leaders seem less agitated about the nettlesome issue of Taiwan than they have been for some time.
  • And third, I don’t know why the fact that Professor Bernstein agitates more people than other VC posters should be seen as proof of anything, let alone reflect unfavorably on him. The Volokh Conspiracy » Kagan and the Cult of Personality
  • If left untreated, the patient may be highly agitated, develop insomnia, become delirious or go into a coma.
  • Do you feel the person is especially silent, agitated or tense?
  • A cement mixer agitates the cement until it is ready to pour.
  • He continually plays to the courtroom audience with rolls of his eyes, rubbing his head, or agitated fanning of his face.
  • She suddenly became very vehement and agitated, jumping around and shouting.
  • He held his hand out to help her up, Hikari took it, her clouded leopard tail flicking lightly to and fro in an agitated manner.
  • To those, who are fond of relations of love and courtship, of the hopes and fears of the tender passion, of warm declarations, agitated hesitations, and timid acceptations, the volumes before us will afford a treat; for this regular routine of interesting detail, occurs about eight times, we believe, in the four thin duodecimos in question.
  • As he pulled the dead body from the spring the water became agitated, and from the bubbles arose a vapor that gradually assumed the form of a venerable Indian, with long white locks, in whom the murderer recognized Waukauga, father of the Shoshone and Comanche nation, and a man whose heroism and goodness made his name revered in both these tribes. Myths and Legends of Our Own Land — Volume 07 : Along the Rocky Range
  • The molinillo was placed in the chocolate pot and agitated to form foam.
  • The real question which this Society wishes to agitate is whether they do not furnish the best remedy for settling all disputes. The Supreme Court of the World
  • Most of the goats cooperate with the necessary inconvenience of hoof trimming but some are skittish, squirmy, or agitated. Farm Journal: Harvesting, Husbandry, and Hoof Trimming
  • And all because the #2 kid loves to get picky pecky and agitate the other kids. Something New to Add to the Job Description List - SpouseBUZZ
  • His belt buckle was digging into the soft skin of her stomach and she moved agitatedly, unconsciously provocative.
  • The nest is agitated by the shaker for a predetermined time interval, usually 15-20 minutes.
  • The mixture is then heated in the agitated vessel.
  • Men cannot for ever perorate, and agitate and plot. The Life of Napoleon I (Volume 1 of 2)
  • Anaerobic lagoons are not usually agitated before manure removal.
  • I suspected the positioning, at least, was a purposeful move to agitate his suspects. NO BODY
  • The housekeeper vows that he never left his glass box at the foot of the stairs from the time Samuel went upstairs first to the time when he came down again, vastly agitated, at a quarter-past one, and sent a message; and during all that time _Denson never passed the box_! The Red Triangle Being Some Further Chronicles of Martin Hewitt, Investigator
  • He was still tense and agitated, and the view did nothing to calm him down.
  • It seemed to gradually slow and grow calmer, less agitated.
  • Pour the powder into the solution and agitate it until the powder has dissolved.
  • He said AWB members were fearful and that the black group were "playing politics" and were there to "agitate" them. News24 Top Stories
  • In Norway, for example, when Gro Harlem Brundtland became prime minister in 1981, she had to endure some of the same sexist scrutnisation which Hillary is currently facing (i.e. the woman is a "witch or a bitch", and has a "bad temper" and tends to sound "shrewish" when "agitated"). Video: Tensions Finally Boil Over Between Hillary And Obama
  • Some breathing techniques may be contraindicated for those with asthma as they leading to agitated bronchial hyperactivity.
  • I must warn you that any mention of Clare agitates your grandmother.
  • After a brief stint as a literary critic in the columns of L' Indicatore Genovese on the side of the romanticists against classicists, he found his way into the secret society of the carbonari to conspire and agitate for government reform.
  • Why is Mrs. Bardell so earnestly entreated not to agitate herself about this warming – pan, unless (as is no doubt the case) it is a mere cover for hidden fire — a mere substitute for some endearing word or promise, agreeably to a preconcerted system of correspondence, artfully contrived by Pickwick with a view to his contemplated desertion, and which I am not in a condition to explain? The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club
  • But, in fact, he was remembering the arhythmic drumroll and the red burbles, and he became so agitated he had to get up from the bed. Here Comes Another Lesson
  • There was a great whoosh, as if someone had agitated the can.
  • The dress must be basically washable in warm water & able to be agitated at least somewhat for uniform dyeing.
  • A member of the public who was in the office fled as the man, who is said to have been in a highly agitated state, walked in.
  • Whereupon she reared up as well as she could, agitated, and exclaimed, ‘I haven't got a disease, have I, doctor?’
  • The fluctuations in respondent curves are accurately corresponding to a blending - layered - settlement program agitated from CO- N2 - C mixture at critical aboil state.
  • A gale had come up, turning the surface of the sea to whitecapped, agitated chop.
  • During and after settling, care should be taken not to agitate the water.
  • When he goes on a date with Jane Gallagher, Holden becomes extremely agitated, because Stradlater is extremely forwardwith his dates.
  • They agitate for power on the clericalist assumption that the Church and her mission belongs to the bishops.
  • From this time till half - past two I became constantly more agitated -- _agitated, _ perhaps, is too strong a word -- but I was restless and anxious beyond what I should have chosen to acknowledge. Narrative and Miscellaneous Papers
  • They flitted around the pit in agitated circles, their burring wings stirring up the rotten-egg stench. Etched in Bone
  • The unions continue to agitate for higher pay.
  • In this method brine is boiled and agitated in huge tanks called vacuum pans.
  • Jinx realized with a shock that he was still in a predatory, feline crouch, lashing his tail agitatedly, the claws on his feet digging into the dirt.
  • Meanwhile, the Warburgs demanded that American Jews not '' agitate '' against the Hitler government, or join the organized boycott. The Palestinian Mufti's Deal with Hitler: Kill All the Jews in the Middle East
  • After reduction, the print should be agitated in rapid fixer for 30 seconds before toning.
  • Nothing must appear to touch you, nothing to agitate: you must never overhaste yourself, must ever keep yourself composed, retaining still an outward calmness, whatever storms may rage within. Chapter XVI. Book V
  • On this particular morning he found Dotty in a somewhat agitated mood.
  • Agitated adrenaline is the perfect tool for combatting stupid co-workers, coffee grubbers and work that you have no desire to do.
  • Convulsive motions agitate his legs, so that though he wills it ever so much, he cannot by any power of his mind stop their motion, (as in that odd disease called chorea sancti viti), but he is perpetually dancing; he is not at liberty in this action, but under as much necessity of moving, as a stone that falls, or a tennis-ball struck with a racket. An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
  • Opening the door to a chink, Rosalie saw the Miss Pockets, shivering, the permanent decoration on the nose of the elder Miss Pocket very conspicuous and agitatedly swinging, ushered into the study, and presently her father follow his jutty nose into the study after them, and very shortly after that the This Freedom
  • I diagnosed him, your Honour, as suffering from a reactive agitated depressive disorder, which was severe in type.
  • And then, later on in the evening, he began to get agitated as the presentation neared.
  • It is never okay to lie, sometimes okay to lie adder addressable addressing adequate adjacent adjunct adjustable administer admission admit advance advansing advantage aegis affect affinity affirm affix afford after again agency aggravate aggregate agitate ahead aid alarm alerating alias alien alignment alined all allied allocation allow alloy along alphabetic alphameric already altenate alteration although altitude altogether ambient ambiguous ambitious Rudy: Iraq Is "In The Hands Of Other People"
  • She was slightly agitated and upset, but not upset enough to run away.
  • Behind the scenes, she agitated for parity with the male stars of the Paris Opera and for a say in how the company was managed.
  • He is happy to be the catalyst, the firestarter, the rainmaker, to agitate and organise, then retreat back to the kitchen, the office and the television studio.
  • If you have an agitated mind, the tension in your body is not going to let you drift off.
  • The magnetopause marks the inner boundary of the agitated region which itself is called the magnetosheath.
  • He sat among the children and pacified one agitated four year old who was taken aback by all the attention he was receiving.
  • With the memory of the bombing fresh in her mind, Eleanor became increasingly agitated.
  • The only expedient which could prevent their separation was boldly agitated and approved the popular resentment was insensibly moulded into a regular conspiracy; their just reasons of complaint were heightened by passion, and their passions were inflamed by wine; as, on the eve of their departure, the troops were indulged in licentious festivity. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • There would still be something left to live for, and who could tell whether that something might not be infinitely grander and nobler and more satisfying than even the rapture of flying ten miles an hour on his wheel, or chevying a flock of agitated sheep from one pasture to another? Austin and His Friends
  • The possible source of the SARS virus in that epidemic was agitated sewage water.
  • And then we're going to see this kind of agitate the atmosphere over the next couple of days. (inaudible) systems possible in areas that already have seen flooding, that may very well be a news flash weather story. CNN Transcript Apr 3, 2008
  • The word most resembling "suffer" that is also something you'd do to a mixture is, I think, succuss, to shake or agitate, usually in the context of homeopathy which also introduces a link to wizardry. Making Light: Rowling's being sued for plagiarism again
  • This remark seemed to agitate her guest.
  • It was a gray, cool autumn day and all the bees were home, now agitated by the surgery.
  • From the edge of the patio he could hear agitated voices coming from inside the poolroom. ALASTAIR MCLEAN'S 'NIGHT WATCH'
  • Instead of shrugging his shoulders, he became agitated and a sarcastic torrent of words flew out.
  • His long, nervous fingers agitate the air in front of Chas. THE SAVAGE GIRL
  • One is that after the second glass was filled the bottle was violently agitated, and so the third glass received the beeswing. The Adventure of the Abbey Grange.
  • Poor Charlotte: it's a difficult time for her, anxious and agitated, only five weeks to Christmas and her fudge won't set, and then there's the turkeys to think of.
  • Acting out this scene, Ria was clearly agitated and she was jumbling up her lines.
  • I suspected the positioning, at least, was a purposeful move to agitate his suspects. NO BODY
  • She was agitated by his sudden appearance at the party.
  • They also agitated for free speech and assembly, the liberation of political prisoners and for the abolition of grain requisitioning.
  • If you're feeling anxious and agitated, try a nervine such as avena, scullcap, or valerian.
  • They didn't even become in the slightest agitated when O'Neill's men disappeared down the tunnel for the interval without having breached the St Mirren goal.
  • Motivated by an evolutionary Force ... this integral activism (i.e. Enlightenment Virus - ed.) effectively reunites the once-polarized paths of peace and power; invoking an invincible evolutionary dynamic that acts directly, vibrationally upon the body, cellular and terrestrial; not simply overpowering from without but setting up a resonance that" agitates "the" particles "of consciousness in the surrounding material field. Triggering the Enlightenment Virus
  • I can tell members that there were moments when the captain of one particular aircraft got rather agitated by what was going on in the cabin, and it was pretty darn scary.
  • When he spoke, his voice, though fretful and agitated, was deep and noble.
  • In the tangle of rocks and trees we get a glimpse of the lions, now becoming agitated.
  • She has agitated for a better senior center south of Interstate 90 since the early 1990s.
  • The next event she is preparing for is next month's opening of the European Parliament in Brussels, where she will later sc reen her film and then agitate for changes in the Common Agricultural Policy, or CAP. The Maverick Marchioness
  • IT was about a week later that Edward Mottisfont rang David Blake up on the telephone and begged him in agitated accents, to come to Mr. Mottisfont without delay. The Fire Within
  • Agitated by these reflections, which put sleep at defiance, Esther continued at her post, listening with that sort of acuteness which is termed instinct in the animals a few degrees below her in the scale of intelligence, for any of those noises which might indicate the approach of footsteps. The Prairie
  • A heated argument and a fistfight broke out whereupon the student council began to agitate for the transfer of seven of the staff involved.
  • By the time I enter the plane, I'm agitated and surrounded by people who look as if nothing unusual at all is happening.
  • “The Lord of Gilsland is right,” said the Lady Calista, much agitated at the thoughts of the investigation which was to take place; “and besides, if I had presence of mind enough to forge a plausible story, beshrew me if I think I should have the courage to tell it.” The Talisman
  • While the Whig and Democratic parties differed in regard to a bank, the tariff distribution, the specie circular, and the subtreasury, they agreed on the great slavery question which now agitates the Union. In the First Debate with Lincoln
  • Then very carefully (so as not to agitate the sediment back up into the wine) pour the wine into a decanter, leaving the last inch behind.
  • A teaspoonful of the _Camphor tincture_ may be put into a tumbler of cold water, ice water if at hand, and the water agitated until it becomes clear, giving a teaspoonful of this camphorated _cold_ water as An Epitome of the Homeopathic Healing Art Containing the New Discoveries and Improvements to the Present Time
  • It was a gray, cool autumn day and all the bees were home, now agitated by the surgery.
  • I was still in an agitated state, so I spent the first few songs flapping about.
  • The clothes were agitated by hand, using a wooden dolly, which had four short legs and a long handle.
  • TianJiang add MSG , a little sesame oil and sugar, vegetable dish with agitate platter.
  • Caught between these two tides, Torold passed a miserable day of fretting and waiting; but it brought him at last well beyond Willem Ten Heyt's tight and brutal guard-post, which by then had amassed a great quantity of goods distrained from agitated travellers, and a dozen sound horses. One Corpse Too Many
  • Air traffic control may be the danger area, but on a day like this you also start thinking about human traffic: the hubbub on the floor, the sheer moaning, agitated, sweaty-palmed mass of humanity on the ground.
  • Ursula Dean's palms were damp as panic pumped through her, escaping in hasty, shallow breathing and agitated heartbeats.
  • He was too much of a gentleman, however, too genial and good-natured, too averse to controversy to agitate for the major generalcy he knew he deserved.
  • It is soluble in water, which means, before conducting atmosphere readings in tanks and void spaces, any residual water will need to be agitated or mopped up.
  • We're just very busy and tired people with two kids and a houseful of agitated guests.
  • They note that she is frequently sad or tearful, that she often becomes agitated, that she has periodic emotional and angry outbursts.
  • I was careful not to agitate too much, while visions of felted cushion covers danced before me.
  • The causes that unroot these weeds at depths where it is generally thought the sea is but slightly agitated, are not sufficiently known. Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of America
  • Pigs and cattle have died when liquid manure stored in pits under slotted floors was agitated.
  • Boiling also agitates the water, increasing the amount of foam.
  • And third, I don’t know why the fact that Professor Bernstein agitates more people than other VC posters should be seen as proof of anything, let alone reflect unfavorably onhim. The Volokh Conspiracy » Kagan and the Cult of Personality
  • The nest is agitated by the shaker for a predetermined time interval, usually 15-20 minutes.
  • She was agitated by his sudden appearance at the party.
  • But now the people are aroused and agitated by Bush's failures to deliver on his two big bets.
  • At first he was extremely agitated that she was standing so close to his private zone.
  • _were_ such a project contemplated by Ministers, they would (forgetting their characteristic caution and reserve) agitate the public mind on so critical a question, and derange vast transactions and arrangements in the corn trade by its premature divulgement; and, above all, constitute the _Globe_ newspaper their confidential organ upon the occasion, should alone have satisfied the most credulous of its unwarrantable and preposterous character. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 53, No. 327, January, 1843
  • Taking long breaths to hide the agitated beats of my thudding heart, I leaned forward more intently to analyze the picture.
  • People like the McLemores fear that Sam, her mother, and her mother's artist friend, Perry, are in the South to "agitate" and to shake up the dividing lines between black and white and blur it all to grey. Meet Author Margaret McMullan!
  • The mysterious opening becomes increasingly agitated till an irate accelerando launches the Allegro on its wayward path.
  • Whatever it is, spores or something in the air agitates air/bronchiole passages, and coughing can be excruciating. ENT
  • Soon there were two malt syrup trade associations, a malt syrup trade magazine, and that surest sign of success, an agitated Wayne B. Wheeler, who in 1925 asked one of his friends in Congress if “the time is ripe to prohibit the sale and distribution of these malt sirups and malt supplies.” LAST CALL
  • With a semisolid or solid manure storage, manure can be hauled when ever time allows without planning ahead to agitate the storage as is required with liquid storages.
  • Once most of the crystals have dissolved, add another heaped spoon and continue to agitate, checking periodically on your progress.
  • But it's the song's swing rather than its lyrics that keep it agitated.
  • He called it biopsychology and explained that by doing specific postures (while following a yoga diet and meditating) a person could help bring into balance agitated states of mind such as anger, shyness, fear, jealousy etc.
  • I thought McCain look angry and agitated, as if ready to jump out of his chair in sheer endocrinal frustration that he is not creaming Obama in the polls. Hey, McCain, What About Josephine the Plumber?: Todd S. Purdum
  • Agitatedly, it changed its spots from orange to blue to green and, finally, flushed perfectly purple.
  • When scumbling on a canvas the surface is lightly agitated, so that the light which falls upon it is scattered.
  • We all know what a difficult road this is and many of us have agitated for substantial improvements to it.
  • His fiery speech agitated the crowd.
  • Other managers attended to their subordinates' agitated feelings so that the employees could maintain continuity in delivering services to the customers.
  • Agitate the mixture to dissolve the powder.
  • She felt lost, empty, dead when she was surrounded by numbers of bright people and it agitated her.
  • In unrelenting, agitated pain, he would wake in the night, delirious, frantic, covered in perspiration. ISAAC CAMPION
  • If you're going to agitate a person by getting them to eat certain foods, I think you've not given them a quality experience.
  • It has agitated for better sex education in order to reduce the number of teenage pregnancies and the spread of venereal diseases.
  • I suspected the positioning, at least, was a purposeful move to agitate his suspects. NO BODY
  • One may argue that Mr. Obama's community-organizer attacks on the wealthy in front of a union crowd (delivered with the tone and syntax of bar-stool resentment) are meant to keep the party's perpetually angry left-wing base agitated enough to vote in November. A President's Class War
  • He stripped off his clothes and defecated in front of Alex, who was urging him to get dressed and leave the back garden, though he could see that Henry was too agitated to do so. Henry’s Demons
  • Still controlling the agitated spool with her left hand, she detaches the end of yarn with the same hand from the spool, and by means of a patent knotter harnessed around her palm she joins together the two loosened ends, one from the little distaff and one from this large spool, so that the two objects are set whirling in unison and the spool receives all the yarn from the distaff. The Woman Who Toils Being the Experiences of Two Gentlewomen as Factory Girls
  • The squirrel-skin robe was agitated and cast aside by a brown arm. LI-WAN, THE FAIR
  • Brown's rough ideas and lyrics and transform them into real songs, while Serrano was able to translate Brown's poorly articulated studio suggestions (a running joke was that he referred to acetates as "agitates") into enthralling, artful production. Chicago Reader
  • If he did not continue, and these sleepless nights or the agitated sleep which maddened him should return, and following them, this over-excitement of the brain in troubling the nutrition of the encephalic mass, it might be the prelude of some grave cerebral affection. The French Immortals Series — Complete
  • In case he became agitated, someone should be standing by with a high-potency neuroleptic for IM rapid tranquilization. DO NO HARM
  • Mr. Chairman and prize goose, -- The feelings which now agitate my sensorium on this Michaelmasian occasion stimulate the vibratetiuncles of the heartiean hypothesis, so as to paralyse the oracular and articulative apparatus of my loquacious confirmation, overwhelming my soul-fraught imagination, as the boiling streams of liquid lava, buried in one vast cinereous mausoleum -- the palace-crowded city of the engulphed Pompeii. Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 1, October 2, 1841
  • But ischemic/hypoxic patients, if conscious, are confused, agitated and amnestic, not calm and serene. Deepak Chopra: Can Science Explain the Soul?
  • He would never finish higher than sixth in the league with West Ham; and although he periodically agitated for a move to Spurs, the West Ham board always insisted on him staying.
  • His most characteristic paintings are in an extremely uninhibited and agitated Expressionist vein, with strident colours and violent brushwork applied with very thick impasto.
  • She hadn't had a nightmare, or a panic attack or anything of that sort, yet she was extremely agitated.
  • This person is agitated, anxious restless, tremulous and looses appetite and cannot sleep.
  • In the emergency department, the patient was agitated, diaphoretic, and in extreme respiratory distress.
  • Ursula Dean's palms were damp as panic pumped through her, escaping in hasty, shallow breathing and agitated heartbeats.
  • The leaves tumbled down the path, agitated by a sudden breeze.
  • Smith's style has an agitated energy that is nicely extended to the Chalfens, but it is rather unadaptable, or at least unadapted to the book's more nuanced characters, who are seen in the same constant light.
  • It begins to protest and agitate just as soon as any tax begins to act protectively, and it denounces any tax that one citizen levies on another.
  • She started to grow agitated at the sight of the spider.
  • Initially operations were performed on a majority of patients with affective disorders, i.e. various types of depression, such as involutional depression, agitated depression and so on. Controversial Psychosurgery Resulted in a Nobel Prize
  • There he agitated for free speech.
  • This subject has been agitated in the local press of this part of Ireland in connection with estimates of Father M'Fadden's income at Ireland Under Coercion (2nd ed.) (1 of 2) (1888)
  • When he comes home from school he is very agitated and upset, and can't understand why he is being picked on.
  • Not everything has to be active, agitated and asphalted. Put The Grid Back Through Seattle Center « PubliCola
  • They agitated for American independence and the abolishment of slavery in the United States.
  • Undoubtedly, my observations will once again agitate a few people who will tell me that I should get behind U.S. automakers instead of criticizing them.
  • You've messed about so long with men who merely 'agitate' and 'inaugurate,' that you've forgotten the kind who act first and talk afterwards. Far to Seek A Romance of England and India
  • The sisters were too agitated to sleep, but presently they heard, rising and growing regular, the long snoring of Leonidas. COUP D'ETAT
  • The agitated gas is then funneled through the actuating blaster module, where it is processed into an intense particle beam.
  • A flock of Mini-Minne-Makers agitates raw fibers into felted beads. Ugly Necklace Complete!
  • Strindberg's stage directions instruct the mother to listen agitatedly to the Fantaisie-Impromptu, matching the agitato marking of the music.
  • The child-actress was the prop of her mother and the donkey; her talent also kept the youth, who began to agitate the nerves of Beynac with his diabolical rataplan hours before each performance. Two Summers in Guyenne
  • In the case of Miss Gotbaum, she was extremely agitated, yelling and screaming, unconsolable, would not calm down. CNN Transcript Oct 1, 2007
  • Agitatedly, it changed its spots from orange to blue to green and, finally, flushed perfectly purple.
  • The result of this seemingly improvisational paint application is an allover, agitated, viscous surface.
  • The alcohol and dissolved base are then mixed with the oil and agitated for one to two hours.
  • He paced up and down, swinging his viewfinder in agitated fashion. A SONG AT TWILIGHT
  • I am neither female, nor African ... but still I think maybe the people who agitate (understandably) against this practice would get further if instead of calling it "circumcision" (which is most definitely is not), they called it "clitoridectomy" (or at least it's country cousin, "clitorectomy"). Mrs Goundo's Daughter
  • Those are points which can be agitated in the Court of Appeal on remitter if, but only if, the notice of appeal to the Court of Appeal is first amended, and you would need leave in the Court of Appeal to do so?
  • The teens, agitated by their restriction, were randomly leaving their living quarters and vehemently hurling obscenities and spitting at staff.
  • Reporting back, he agitated for reform, so troubled was he by the abuses he had uncovered.
  • Even though I was over 250 meters from the sitting bird the other stilts were really agitated and swooped low over my head and continued to call.

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