How To Use Propitiate In A Sentence

  • In those days people might sacrifice a goat or sheep to propitiate an angry god.
  • propitiate the gods with a sacrifice.
  • The "Chinks" gave evidence that so far from making trouble they were extremely anxious to propitiate and please, and the man who had evidently served Chang appeared in the cabin tidying things and laying out the food, whilst the man who had evidently been mate worked the ship in his own weird way seeming scarcely ever to sleep. The Beach of Dreams
  • In those days people might sacrifice a goat or sheep to propitiate an angry god.
  • I was obliged to propitiate him by hiring the horse, at a staggering fee, for the duration of our stay at Dahshoor. LION IN THE VALLEY
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  • I think that's a fair enough position to take - certainly there are quite a few instances of ‘fierce’ goddesses being propitiated in order to keep them ‘sweet’ as it were.
  • And Suetonius, speaking of Otho, says, “He endeavours, by all kinds of piacular sacrifices, to propitiate the manes of Galba, by whom he had seen himself thrust down and expelled.” A Dissertation on Divine Justice
  • The death of Christ propitiates God, and the word ‘propitiation’ contains the thought of averting the wrath of God.
  • This being occult worship, they propitiate ghosts as part of their ritual.
  • I was obliged to propitiate him by hiring the horse, at a staggering fee, for the duration of our stay at Dahshoor. LION IN THE VALLEY
  • They offer a sacrifice to propitiate the god.
  • I was obliged to propitiate him by hiring the horse, at a staggering fee, for the duration of our stay at Dahshoor. LION IN THE VALLEY
  • The radicals in the party were clearly sacked to propitiate the conservative core.
  • These ancient ceremonies propitiate the spirits of the waters.
  • In those days people might sacrifice a goat or sheep to propitiate an angry god.
  • The radicals in the party were clearly sacked to propitiate the conservative core.
  • In those days people might sacrifice a goat or sheep to propitiate an angry god.
  • It suits the French to adopt an anti-war posture at the moment because they are trying to propitiate a revival of their duumvirate over the European Union with the Germans.
  • Crowds gathered from the neighboring towns to gaze on the man whom they had known as a scorned and abused slave, and who now appeared among them as the ambassador of a power which hitherto, indeed, they had despised, but which in their present mood they were willing to propitiate. The Jesuits in North America in the Seventeenth Century
  • Perhaps he offers this volume to propitiate the gods he has deposed.
  • Indigenous peoples across the Americas benefited from tobacco in healing practices and rituals designed to propitiate the gods who controlled the movement of game or the success of a year's crop.
  • Since these people used tobacco to propitiate their deities, the herb itself was one of the instruments of godless, false religions.
  • In those days people might sacrifice a goat or sheep to propitiate an angry god.
  • Unchanging principles were involved - an animal without blemish died in the place of the human sinner to propitiate God's wrath against sin and free the transgressor from guilt and punishment.
  • I could propitiate a particular deity who is associated with books (for example Thoth, or Ganesha).
  • The haunting became so intense that in 1999 Buddhist monks were invited to the museum to offer foods to propitiate the restless souls of the victims who had been murdered there.
  • In those days people might sacrifice a goat or sheep to propitiate an angry god.
  • All people knew (or thought they knew) that he had made himself immensely rich; and, for that reason alone, prostrated themselves before him, more degradedly and less excusably than the darkest savage creeps out of his hole in the ground to propitiate, in some log or reptile, the Deity of his benighted soul. Little Dorrit
  • All that needed to be done to propitiate God's wrath and save his people from their sins had been accomplished.
  • Rituals associated with ploughing and planting of rice during monsoon and then again later at the end of monsoon were occasions to propitiate the gods for a bountiful harvest.
  • In those days people might sacrifice a goat or sheep to propitiate an angry god.
  • In those days people might sacrifice a goat or sheep to propitiate an angry god.
  • On the one hand, he conceded that the old rites had the weight of immemorial tradition behind them, and no doubt propitiated malevolent spirits.
  • Spirit mediums and their adherents built ‘spirit huts’ near trees that were necessary to propitiate malevolent spirits.
  • It was quite a little feast; two ounces of seven – and – sixpenny green, and a quarter of a pound of the best fresh; and Mr. Wilkins had brought a pint of shrimps, neatly folded up in a clean belcher, to give a zest to the meal, and propitiate Mrs. Ivins. Sketches by Boz
  • The Erinyes are propitiated by a new ritual, in which they are worshipped as Eumenides, and Orestes dedicates an altar to Athena Areia. 2008 August | ultraorange.net
  • The little silver bell tinkles at a wayside shrine, calling the labouring man to propitiate the idol for the carelessness and detected dishonesties of his day's labours, and goodly Hindus, men and women, stream down the busy thoroughfare, responsive to the call. Love and Life Behind the Purdah
  • It is to be propitiated rather than harnessed: young couples make love in the newly ploughed furrows at seedtime as imitative magic to guarantee fertility.
  • Plotinus and Porphyry felt reserve towards participation in sacrifices to propitiate the spirits.
  • Right at that moment, a young boy, hardly 20 or even younger, looked up at me and said sardonically, ‘To propitiate the gods, babu, we do not have to look up these days.’
  • One of them began with an attempt to propitiate the powers which environ him and determine his destiny.…
  • Stravinsky then turned to a pagan rite of a girl dancing herself to death before the elders in order to propitiate the god of spring.
  • In those days people might sacrifice a goat or sheep to propitiate an angry god.
  • The Samhitas are hymns addressed to gods representing the forces of nature, followed by rites and sacrifices to propitiate those gods.
  • One is therefore, from more than one point of view, left with a sort of Fakir self-mortification, undertaken and "dreed" neither to atone for anything, nor to propitiate any Power, nor really to benefit any man. A History of the French Novel, Vol. 2 To the Close of the 19th Century
  • At times, too, now, she almost bent before what seemed her fate, in hopelessness of escaping from it; and at those times she strove to accommodate herself to it, and tried to propitiate her captor. The Old Helmet
  • Each village has its own shaman to propitiate the spirits that cause illness and accidents, and a priest to perform the village ceremony for the ancestor spirits.

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