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ex-ăgĭto , āvi, ātum, 1, v. freq. a.,
I.to drive out of its position or place; to stir up, rouse up, disturb.
I. Lit. (very seldom): “ut quicquid faecis subsederit exagitet, et in summum reducat,Col. 12, 19, 4: “vis (venti) exagitata foras erumpitur,Lucr. 6, 583. —Poet.: “lustra ferarum Venatu,to disturb, Sil. 16, 553: “lepus hic aliis exagitandus erit,to rouse, start, Ov. A. A. 3, 662; cf. Petr. 131, 7.—
II. Trop., to rouse up (qs. like a wild beast), to disquiet, harass, persecute, disturb, torment.
B. In partic.
2. To stir up, irritate, excite: “coepere (tribuni) senatum criminando plebem exagitare,Sall. C. 38, 1; cf. “vulgum,id. J. 73, 5.—In a good sense: “hujus disputationibus et exagitatus maxime orator est et adjutus,incited, urged onwards, Cic. Or. 3, 12.—Of abstract objects: “in tali tempore tanta vis hominis leniunda quam exagitanda videbatur,Sall. C. 48, 5; Tac. A. 4, 12.—
b. Transf., to stir up, excite the passions themselves: ne et meum maerorem exagitem et te in eundem luctum vocem, Cic. Att. 3, 7, 2; “tristes curas,Luc. 8, 44: “furores immiti corde,Cat. 64, 94.
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