exhort in English

verb
1
strongly encourage or urge (someone) to do something.
the media have been exhorting people to turn out for the demonstration

Use "exhort" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "exhort" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "exhort", or refer to the context using the word "exhort" in the English Dictionary.

1. We do not exhort ourselves.

2. These things teach and exhort.

3. Therefore I exhort you, be imitators of me.

4. To entreat earnestly and often repeatedly; exhort.

5. The opposition can only question and exhort.

6. I exhort you therefore, Become imitators of me.

7. Living prophets and apostles teach, expound, exhort, warn, and testify.

8. By delivering a series of discourses that encourage and exhort, admonish and warn.

9. 42 And to teach, expound, exhort, baptize, and watch over the church;

10. How can an elder “exhort by the teaching that is healthful”?

11. (Titus 2:6) To exhort means “to urge strongly; advise or warn earnestly.”

12. In what ways can we “exhort by the teaching that is healthful”?

13. CHRISTIAN elders must be able to “exhort by the teaching that is healthful.”

14. The Corporation considered the £400 price was simply an attempt by the company to exhort public money.

15. Preach Bein season and out of season. Convince , rebuke , exhort, with all longsuffering and teaching.

16. But I exhort you more especially to do this, that I may be restored to you the sooner.”

17. At times, they even “reprove, reprimand, exhort, with all long-suffering and art of teaching.”

18. We exhort you to disconnect, discard and move on, acquire a certain agility as consumers.

19. 22 These things speak and exhort and reprove with all authority. Let no one disregard you.

20. Children, I exhort you to shun her, exclude her, shut her out from this day forth.

21. At 2 Timothy 4:2, the Bible says that elders must at times “reprove, reprimand, exhort.”

22. 29 I exhort you to do the monitoring you so sorely need, and hang in there.

23. I exhort the Council to find a solution that adequately addresses the imperatives of both peace and justice

24. He would also exhort his children to read it, and laid great stress upon the utility of information.

25. True, overseers sometimes need to “reprove, reprimand, exhort,” but this is done “with all long-suffering and art of teaching.”

26. Antonyms for throw a wet blanket on include encourage, advise, recommend, urge, persuade, suggest, caution, propose, counsel and exhort

27. Tim. 1 Do not upbraid an elderly man, but exhort him as a father(Sentencedict.com ), younger men as brothers.

28. (Isaiah 32:1, 2) Even when there is a need to exhort or reprove, the tone of the counsel should be refreshing.

29. Adjure: verb administer an oath, affirm , appeal to , ask , attest , beseech , bid , bind , call , charge , command , declare , enjoin , entreat , enunciate , exhort

30. They were appointed as elders, or overseers, who could “exhort by the teaching that is healthful and . . . reprove those who contradict.”

31. Admoni (present admonas, past Admonis, future admonos, conditional admonus, volitive admonu) ( transitive ) to Admonish , exhort , advise , enjoin Mi Admonis la infanojn al pacienco.

32. It has been remarked that the prophecy of a new generation of teachers who would rebuke and exhort the Athenian people in harsher and more violent terms was, as far as

33. Confute (2 Occurrences) Titus 1:9 holding -- according to the teaching -- to the stedfast word, that he may be able also to exhort in the sound teaching, and the gainsayers to convict; (See RSV)

34. 12 To begin with, Peter said: “Beloved, I exhort you as aliens and temporary residents to keep abstaining from fleshly desires, which are the very ones that carry on a conflict against the soul.”

35. Bequeath was derived from the Middle English word Bequethen which was in turn derived from the Old English word becwedan, meaning "to speak to, to exhort" or "to leave by will."The Old English cwedan is an appropriation of the Proto-Germanic kwethan which bears the same meaning

36. Bequeath was derived from the Middle English word bequethen which was in turn derived from the Old English word becwedan, meaning "to speak to, to exhort" or "to leave by will."The Old English cwedan is an appropriation of the Proto-Germanic kwethan which bears the same meaning

37. Bequeath (v.) Old English becweðan "to say, speak to, exhort, blame," also "leave by will;" from be-+ cweðan "to say," from Proto-Germanic *kwithan, from PIE root *gwet-"to say, speak." The simple verb became obsolete, but its old, strong past tense survived through Middle English as quoth.

38. Others oppose not the existence of the Church, nor indeed could they; yet they despoil her of the nature and rights of a perfect society, and maintain that it does not belong to her to legislate, to judge, or to punish, but only to exhort, to advise, and to rule her subjects in accordance with their own consent and will. By such opinion they pervert the nature of this divine society, and attenuate and narrow its authority, its office of teacher, and its whole efficiency; and at the same time they aggrandize the power of the civil government to such extent as to subject the Church of God to the empire and sway of the State, like any voluntary association of citizens.