Hortatory vs Inducement - What's the difference?
hortatory | inducement |
Giving exhortation or advice; encouraging; exhortatory; inciting.
* 1992 , , Penguin Books, paperback edition, page 47
Exhortation or advice; incitement; encouragement.
* 2004 , , Westward: A Fictional History of the American West , Macmillan, page 53
That which exhorts, incites, or encourages.
* 1907 , , Macmillan and Company, seventh edition, page 12
An incentive that helps bring about a desired state.
(legal) An introductory statement of facts or background information.
(shipping) The act of placing a port on a vessel's itinerary because the volume of cargo offered at that port justifies the cost of routing the vessel.
As nouns the difference between hortatory and inducement
is that hortatory is exhortation or advice; incitement; encouragement while inducement is an incentive that helps bring about a desired state.As an adjective hortatory
is giving exhortation or advice; encouraging; exhortatory; inciting.hortatory
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- Not in a curse but in a hortatory appeal.
Synonyms
* (encouraging) protrepticNoun
(hortatories)- I did not know enough of the Book to understand his hortatory but it seemed to please Miz Ann, who thanked him for his blessings, said she did not require his other services, and that he had paid for his meal with his message.
- For here as in other points the development of the theory of Ethics would seem to be somewhat impeded by the preponderance of practical considerations; and perhaps a more complete detachment of the theoretical study of right conduct from its practical application is to be desired for the sake even of the latter itself: since a treatment which is a compound between the scientific and the hortatory is apt to miss both the results that it would combine; the mixture is bewildering to the brain and not stimulating to the heart.
inducement
English
Noun
(en noun)- Citation of Richard Stallman ...it won't run on a free platform and (...) your program is actually an inducement for people to install non-free software. Richard Stallman's speech in Australian National University on 13 October 2004, Part 2, as seen in
this film
on video.google.com, circa 40% into the movie. Stallman was talking about Java and flash as inducements for installing non-free software.