Embolden vs Urge - What's the difference?
embolden | urge | Related terms |
To render (someone) bolder or more courageous.
To encourage, inspire, or motivate.
(typography) To format text in boldface.
* 2004 : Jason Whittaker, The Cyberspace Handbook , p216
To press; to push; to drive; to impel; to force onward.
* Alexander Pope
To press the mind or will of; to ply with motives, arguments, persuasion, or importunity.
* Shakespeare
To provoke; to exasperate.
* Shakespeare
To press hard upon; to follow closely.
* Alexander Pope
To present in an urgent manner; to insist upon.
(obsolete) To treat with forcible means; to take severe or violent measures with.
To press onward or forward.
To be pressing in argument; to insist; to persist.
In transitive terms the difference between embolden and urge
is that embolden is to encourage, inspire, or motivate while urge is to be pressing in argument; to insist; to persist.As a noun urge is
a strong desire; an itch to do something.embolden
English
Verb
(en verb)- The tags
indicate paragraphs breaks, and we have included some basic text formatting: for emphasis (typically italics), for underline and to embolden text.
Synonyms
* (typography) boldfaceQuotations
* (English Citations of "embolden")References
urge
English
Verb
(urg)- through the thick deserts headlong urged his flight
- My brother never / Did urge me in his act; I did inquire it.
- Urge not my father's anger.
- Heir urges heir, like wave impelling wave.
- to urge''' an argument; to '''urge the necessity of a case
- to urge an ore with intense heat