agitant
See also: agîtant
English
Etymology 1
From Latin agitāns, present participle of agitō (“I shake, brandish, agitate”); equivalent to agitate + -ant.
Noun
agitant (plural agitants)
- A person who agitates.
- Synonym: agitator
- 1665, Robert Howard, The Committee, Act III, Scene 1, in Five New Plays, London: Henry Herringman, 1692 p. 77,
- Now am I ready for any Plot; I’ll go find some of these Agitants, and fill up a blank Commission with my Name.
- 2008, Helene Cooper, The House at Sugar Beach, New York: Simon & Schuster, Part 1, Chapter 11, p. 137:
- If it were up to those two, he said, all political agitants would be locked up in jail.
- A thing that agitates.
- 1833, Nathan Hale, “The Tavern Doctor”, in Notes Made during an Excursion to the Highlands of New Hampshire and Lake Winnipiseogee, Andover, MA, page 175:
- 1918, Francis Hackett, chapter 14, in Ireland: A Study in Nationalism, New York: Huebsch, page 376:
- […] the enormous effect of the insurrection on the government—the hasty executions, the deportations, the inpouring of troops into Ireland and the establishment of military tribunals—convinced Ireland that insurrection was a powerful agitant, and this greatly invigorated the national will.
- 1975, David Binder, chapter 9, in The Other German: Willy Brandt’s Life and Times, Washington: New Republic Book Co, page 237:
- […] he also promised that the convention would take a stand on the Vietnam conflict, which was such an agitant for young people—in Germany as in the United States—waving Viet Cong flags and shouting, "Ho-Ho-Ho Chi Minh!”
Adjective
agitant (comparative more agitant, superlative most agitant)
- That agitates.
- Synonym: agitating
- 1893, H. B. Marriott Watson, “The Rose of the Morning”, in Diogenes of London and Other Fantasies and Sketches, London: Methuen, pages 225–226:
- […] at her white bosom is that patch incarnadine—the red, red rose. Agitant and tremulous it has burst open, and its pure heart lies bare.
- 1923, Jean Toomer, “Blood-Burning Moon”, in Cane, New York: Liveright, published 1993, page 28:
- The slow rhythm of her song grew agitant and restless.
Catalan
Pronunciation
French
Pronunciation
Audio (file)
Further reading
- “agitant”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Anagrams
Latin
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