English | German | Russian | Czech

excite English

Meaning excite meaning

What does excite mean?
Definitions in simple English

excite

If something excites you, it makes you feel interested, happy, and awake. A good DJ can excite the crowd and make people dance. The new pictures from space excite the imagination. If something excites someone, it makes them think about sex. If something excites a nerve or a part of an animal or plant, it makes it more active.

excite

arouse or elicit a feeling (= stimulate) act as a stimulant The book stimulated her imagination This play stimulates produce a magnetic field in excite the neurons raise to a higher energy level excite the atoms (= stimulate, stir) stir feelings in stimulate my appetite excite the audience stir emotions (= arouse) stimulate sexually This movie usually arouses the male audience (= shake, stir) stir the feelings, emotions, or peace of These stories shook the community the civil war shook the country (= agitate, rouse, charge, charge up) cause to be agitated, excited, or roused The speaker charged up the crowd with his inflammatory remarks

Synonyms excite synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as excite?

Topics excite topics

What do people use excite to talk about?

Conjugation excite conjugation

How do you conjugate excite?

excite · verb

Examples excite examples

How do I use excite in a sentence?

Simple sentences

Money doesn't excite me. It calms me.

Movie subtitles

Do not excite her.
To be candid, Father, a prolonged future doesn't excite me.
The doctor said you shouldn't excite yourself.
Please don't excite yourself.
Now, don't excite yourself.
You mustn't excite yourself this way.
Now, come on, don't excite yourself.
To return to forgotten memories, where the faces of the old gods shine, excite, inspire. and vanish.
Now there's no need to excite the family members.
Please, Monsieur, you must not excite yourself.
Please, Madame, do not excite yourself.
But I won't tell you what it was, so don't excite yourself too much.
It's obviously been rigged to unduly excite the jury.
Don't excite yourself, Mary.
You excite me.
DOOR THUDS Get out. Now, don't excite yourself, brother, I was just trying to.
Now steady, Oliver. You mustn't excite yourself.
Darling, why should I excite you?
I'm used to the stories they invent about me. and which excite their minds.
Lie down, don't excite yourself.
When I'm alone with him, I let him ramble on, but I fear your presence will excite his vanity.
At half the size it would excite their imagination.
The dragon will excite horror in every prior's heart.
Don't excite her too much, doctor.
Excite her?
Not just for the sweet music they make, but-- but physically, they-- they excite me just to look at them.
I know we shouldn't excite him, but he'll be sick a long time.
Waves of energy that excite the eye.
Mary that we had, inflating your ass to excite him.
They excite me, sometimes.
For the same reasons you excite me.
You excite his curiosity.

News and current affairs

The party actively supports Putin, but refrained from appearing in televised debates, possibly because it has no charismatic leaders of its own who can excite the public with sharp polemics.
Because women excite the desires of men, they are thought to pose a threat outside the confines of the family home.
For most people, the topics that excite physicists do not seem to affect daily life in the slightest.
Some injury messages directly excite brain structures that produce emotion, and these in turn stimulate areas of the brain that create the meaning of the immediate situation.
US budget deficits as far as the eye can see might excite fear of losses on US Treasury bonds.
But, whereas many rushed to see Klimov's film, Alexievich's book did not seem to excite readers.
Campaigns should excite and point the way; governing is about the dull slog of detailed policies, and the effort to build enough support for necessary actions to enhance prosperity and freedom to take place.

Are you looking for...?