Use "stir up" in a sentence

1. Don't stir up the dregs.

2. She's always trying to stir up scandal.

3. Next, stir up the eggs with the milk.

4. They are trying to stir up international jihad.

5. You don't want to stir up any ghosts.

6. Always trying to stir up trouble for me.

7. His speech was calculated to stir up the crowd.

8. Their aim was to stir up feeling against the war.

9. You want to stir up public emotion, is that it?

10. What they are doing is bound to stir up controversy.

11. Before painting, you should stir up the paint a bit.

12. 24 His speech was calculated to stir up the crowd.

13. The author was playing the devil's advocate to stir up argument.

14. And if you stir up a hornet's nest, you create trouble or problems.

15. To stir up public interest in a cause: Agitate for a tax reduction

16. Wind coming over the peaks can stir up rotors that'll drag you right down.

17. And if you strone stir up a hornet's nest, you create trouble or problems.

18. The murder of anti-Soviet activists abroad would stir up fierce controversy at home.

19. They stir up one’s thinking processes and make it easier to grasp new thoughts.

20. This has caused humanitarian problems that have helped to stir up racism and hatred.

21. For many of us, these long winter nights stir up painful memories and fearful thoughts.

22. It will dig deep down into your brain and stir up the most heinous shit.

23. So Renwick kept the conversation innocuous, nothing to stir up any more tension in Moore.

24. Certainly, looming cancellation, panting adolescents and constant comparisons with a big star stir up inner turmoil.

25. There was thus little in the second reign to stir up renewed animosity towards the Woodvilles.

26. As we have already seen, angry or impulsive responses only stir up contention. —Proverbs 29:22.

27. We may also stir up feelings of envy and a spirit of competition. —Ecclesiastes 4:4.

28. 19 The most vulnerable to stir up trouble among the variety show award in this category.

29. The dismissal of such people would stir up controversy the president would just as soon avoid.

30. When Paul went to Beroea, these persecutors followed him there in order to stir up more trouble.

31. To stir up; rouse to action (often used reflexively): She Bestirred herself at the first light of morning.

32. (Psalm 118:6) Satan will continue to fan the flames of opposition and try to stir up tribulation.

33. If their tendency is that they are likely or intended to stir up racial hatred, that is sufficient.

34. Abhorrent definition is - causing or deserving strong dislike or hatred : being so repugnant as to stir up positive antagonism

35. Male speaker Anybody with strong convictions that what he is doing is right is bound to stir up controversy.

36. How dared this man, a virtual stranger, stir up these doubts in so private an area of her life?

37. Bestir definition, to stir up; rouse to action (often used reflexively): She Bestirred herself at the first light of morning

38. The best way to deal with the problem is therefore never to stir up the mud accumulated at the bottom.

39. She hated being the centre of attention, but at least it would serve to stir up an interest in her business.

40. How extraordinary that a waif-like singer in her 20s - however you judge her talents - can stir up so much feeling.

41. When the china related article doesn't stir up a hothead debate, it means the worry is real and felt by many Chinese.

42. You don't want the publicity, and I sure as hell don't wanna stir up a mess just eight weeks before the Democratic Convention.

43. Top 10 Campfire Games for Friends and Family These interactive Camping games are excellent ways to stir up conversation and bond in between s’mores.

44. Its specific purpose is to stir up interest among lithologists and geologists in the geochemical environment associated with the formation of Authigenic minerals in

45. Able to disrupt attacks and spread play , Mikel 's presence in the 2010 FIFA World CupTM will stir up and unite hopes in the hearts of Nigerians .

46. In folk tales, these fans sometimes have the ability to grow or shrink a person's nose, but usually they are attributed the power to stir up great winds.

47. No Merry Andrew, to stir up the multitude with jests, perhaps hundreds of years old, but still effective, by their appeals to the very broadest sources of mirthful sympathy.

48. Champerty is no longer a crime, and its strictures have been substantially loosened over time, recognizing that a bona fide business arrangement that did not “stir up” litigation was not

49. Melt feeling in language teaching, stir up a student to"inebriate" a language, make thus language classroom teaching to attain to open but have vitality, the instruction student learn good language.

50. Ballparks, Baseball Stadiums, Fields of DreamS EVERY Ballpark Used by a Major League Baseball Team Yankee Stadium, The Polo Grounds, Griffith Stadium, Wrigley Field, and countless other homes for Major League franchises often stir up indelible memories.

51. During the nights when he had wakeful hours upon his bed, such correction could take place, for he was all alone with his thoughts and God’s spirit could stir up the “advice” that Jehovah had given him during the day.

52. And we trawl, which means to take something the size of a tractor trailer truck that weighs thousands and thousands of pounds, put it on a big chain, and drag it across the sea floor to stir up the bottom and catch the fish.

53. Bestirred is the past tense and participle of bestir, which means “to stir up, rouse to action.” Stir is clear enough, but what about be –? It’s a prefix English formerly added to verbs to various effect, seen in words ranging from become to besiege

54. From The Grindhouse Cinema Database The word "Blaxploitation" was originally created not by a white person but by an African-American who was slighted by the producers of Super Fly. It was initially coined to stir up controversy/stereotyping and for many years black filmmakers/actors didn't accept it as a positive term.

55. Asininity mowa ahnen lassen Encomiums pilot yabun German folk song phthisic study and measurement of behavior and relationships within a social group, study of groups anoniman obec picks if I cannot bend heaven then I shall move (or stir up) Acheron (i.e., hell) (Virgil) pol induco-are bed colocador angur illusion lorandite (n.) causality

56. Saxberg said, "A free give-and-take can generate more creativity and discussion than when there's just one executive who slowly Bureaucratizes himself." But he also warned that appointing several equals in a job can stir up unhealthy competition if they all see themselves jockeying for a single position on the next rung of the corporate ladder.

57. Sensing the worsening mood in the country, on 27 March 1947 deputies Raseta, Ravoahangy and Rabemananjara jointly issued a statement, urging the public to "maintain absolute calm and coolness in the face of manoeuvrings and provocations of all kind destined to stir up troubles among the Malagasy population and to sabotage the peaceful policy of the MDRM."

58. Of course, nowadays we recognize that our soil is the Birthbed of SO much! Whatever message you may intend to give out, you love to create a stir! Unlike Orange, however, the energy you stir up in Black is commanding, and implies disciplined self-control, complete independence, a very strong will to be dealt with, and an aura of power and

59. In view of all this, it is little wonder that one author acidly said: “If the present condition of international hatred, mass murder, violated treaties, forgotten honor, and civilian extermination in the holy name of war are the best that evolution can accomplish, we should hand the whole mess back to the monkeys and ask them to stir up another batch!”

60. In the case of confirmation, there is a special prayer that seeks the Holy Spirit's strengthening of the Confirmand for his/her participation in the mission of the church: Father in heaven, for Jesus' sake, stir up in [name] the gift of your Holy Spirit; confirm his/her faith, guide his/her life, empower him/her in his/her serving, give him/her

61. Agitate (v.) 1580s, "to disturb," from Latin agitatus, past participle of agitare "to put in constant or violent motion, drive onward, impel," frequentative of agere "to set in motion, drive, drive forward," figuratively "incite to action; keep in movement, stir up" (from PIE root *ag-"to drive, draw out or forth, move").

62. For the Confessions of my past sins — which You have forgiven and covered, that You might make me happy in You, changing my soul by faith and Your sacrament — when they are read and heard, stir up the heart, that it sleep not in despair and say, I cannot; but that it may awake in the love of Your mercy and the sweetness of Your grace, by

63. Aeschines, orator and statesman of Athens, 390 or 389–314 BCE, became active in politics about 350.In 348 he was a member of a mission sent to the Peloponnese to stir up feeling against the growing power of king Philip of Macedon; but in 347, when part of a peace-making embassy to Philip, was won over to sympathy with the king, and became a supporter of the peace policy of the Athenian