Summon vs Excite - What's the difference?
summon | excite | Synonyms |
To call people together; to convene.
* 2007 . Zerzan, John. Silence .
To ask someone to come; to send for.
* November 2 2014 , Daniel Taylor, "
(legal) To order someone to appear in court, especially by issuing a summons.
To stir the emotions of.
To arouse or bring out (eg feelings); to stimulate.
(physics) To cause an electron to move to a higher than normal state; to promote an electron to an outer level.
As verbs the difference between summon and excite
is that summon is to call people together; to convene while excite is to stir the emotions of.As a noun summon
is call, command, order.summon
English
(wikipedia summon)Verb
(en-verb) (transitive)- Silence is primary, summoning presence to itself; so it's a connection to the realm of origin.
Sergio Agüero strike wins derby for Manchester City against 10-man United," guardian.co.uk
- City will feel nonplussed when they review the tape and Pellegrini had to summon all his restraint in the post-match interviews.
Derived terms
* summons * summon upexcite
English
Verb
(excit)- The fireworks which opened the festivities excited anyone present.
- Favoritism tends to excite jealousy in the ones not being favored.
- The political reforms excited unrest among to population.
- There are drugs designed to excite certain nerves in our body.
- By applying electric potential to the neon atoms, the electrons become excited , then emit a photon when returning to normal.
