释义 |
agitation
ag·i·ta·tion A0143000 (ăj′ĭ-tā′shən)n.1. The act of agitating or the state of being agitated.2. Extreme emotional disturbance; perturbation.3. The stirring up of public interest in a matter of controversy, such as a political or social issue. ag′i·ta′tion·al adj.agitation (ˌædʒɪˈteɪʃən) n1. a state of excitement, disturbance, or worry2. the act of moving something vigorously; the shaking or stirring of something3. the act of attempting to stir up public opinion for or against something ˌagiˈtational adjag•i•ta•tion (ˌædʒ ɪˈteɪ ʃən) n. 1. the act of agitating or the state of being agitated. 2. persistent urging of a political or social cause or theory before the public. [1560–70; < Latin] ag`i•ta′tion•al, adj. Agitation See Also: EXCITEMENT, HEARTBEAT, NERVOUSNESS, TREMBLING - Agitated with delight as a waving sea —Arabian Nights
- Agitation … like insects coming alive in the spring —William Goyen
- Calm as a tornado —Anon
- Composed as an egg gatherer in a rattlesnake pit —Harry Prince
- Disturbing as decay in a carcass —Julia O’Faolain
- Feel like he had a mouse water skiing in his stomach —Joseph Wambaugh
- Feel my insides slipping away as if they are on a greased slide —W. P. Kinsella
- Felt as if his heart was beating itself to death in some empty hollow —Oscar Wilde
- Felt her heart make little leaps, as though it might creep onto her tongue and expose something —Leigh Allison Wilson
- Felt his heart quicken, as a horse quickens at the faint warning touch of the spur —Ben Ames Williams
- (Arrived in the library with every nerve twittering) felt like a tree full of starlings —M. J. Farrell
- Froze my heart like a block of ice —T. Coraghessan Boyle
- Hearts drumming like wings —Paul Horgan
- Her heart leaped like a fish —Katherine Mansfield
- Her heart … plucking inside her chest like a bird in a bag —Brian Moore
- Her heart … plucking inside her chest like a bird in a bag —Brian Moore
- His heart pumping like a boiler about to blow —Ira Wood
- Her heart … thundering like ten hearts —Sharon Sheehe Stark
- Her stomach leaped up inside her like a balloon —William Styron
- His heart beat so hard he sometimes fondled it with his hands as though trying to calm a wild bird that wanted to fly away —Bernard Malamud
- His heart chilled like a stone in a creek —John Farris
- His heart … like a madly bouncing ball, beating the breath out of his body —Helen Hudson
- His heart moving so fast it was like one of those motorcycles at fairs that the fellow drives around the walls of a pit —Flannery O’Connor
- His heart racing like a quick little animal in a cage —T. Coraghessan Boyle
- His heart sinks like a soap in a bucket —Robert Coover
- His heart thundered like horses galloping over a wooden bridge —Gerald Kersh
- His heart whammed like a wheezing steam engine —Bernard Malamud
- His soul seething within him like a Welsh rabbit at the height of its fever —P. G. Wodehouse
See Also: SOUL - I could hear my heart, like somebody hammering on a tree —John D. MacDonald
- It seemed like something snapped inside of me, something like a suspender strap —John Steinbeck
- (Scandal and chaos … ) kicked up like chicken feathers —Pat Ellis Taylor
- My heart behaved like a fresh-caught trout —Lael Tucker Wertenbaker
- My heart felt like a rabbit running wildly around inside my rib cage —James Crumley
- My heart jumped like a fox —Scott Spencer
- My heart leaped like a big bass after a willow fly —Borden Deal
- My heart pounded like a drowning swimmer’s —Frank Conroy
- My heart pounded … like the hoofbeats of a horse —Charles Johnson
- My heart stopped as if a knife had been driven through it —Rudyard Kipling
- My heart turned over like a dirtbike in the wrong gear —T. Coraghessan Boyle
- My heart would flutter like a duck in a puddle, and if I tried to outdo it and speak, it would get right smack up in my throat and choke me like a cold potato —Irving Stone
- My stomach plunged like an elevator out of control —T. Coraghessan Boyle
- Nerves melt like jellyfish —Derek Walcott
- Placid as a riptide —Joseph Wambaugh
- The pressure was building in me like beer on a full bladder —T. Coraghessan Boyle
- Seemed to smoulder like a tar-barrel on the point of explosion —Lawrence Durrell
- The sense of horror and failure had clutched his spine like the wet, wrinkled hand of a drowned woman —William Styron
- Set my heart to rocking like a boat in a swell —Edna St. Vincent Millay
- She explodes like a chestnut thrown on the fire —Colette
ThesaurusNoun | 1. | agitation - a mental state of extreme emotional disturbancemental condition, mental state, psychological condition, psychological state - (psychology) a mental condition in which the qualities of a state are relatively constant even though the state itself may be dynamic; "a manic state"perturbation, upset, disturbance - an unhappy and worried mental state; "there was too much anger and disturbance"; "she didn't realize the upset she caused me"fret, stew, swither, sweat, lather - agitation resulting from active worry; "don't get in a stew"; "he's in a sweat about exams"dither, fuss, pother, tizzy, flap - an excited state of agitation; "he was in a dither"; "there was a terrible flap about the theft"tailspin - loss of emotional control often resulting in emotional collapse | | 2. | agitation - a state of agitation or turbulent change or development; "the political ferment produced new leadership"; "social unrest"ferment, fermentation, unrest, tempestuousnessSturm und Drang, upheaval, turbulence - a state of violent disturbance and disorder (as in politics or social conditions generally); "the industrial revolution was a period of great turbulence" | | 3. | agitation - the feeling of being agitated; not calmfeeling - the experiencing of affective and emotional states; "she had a feeling of euphoria"; "he had terrible feelings of guilt"; "I disliked him and the feeling was mutual"unrest - a feeling of restless agitationfidget, fidgetiness, restlessness - a feeling of agitation expressed in continual motion; "he's got the fidgets"; "waiting gave him a feeling of restlessness"stewing - an extreme state of worry and agitation; "his stewing over the fight kept him awake most of the night"stir - emotional agitation and excitementtumult, turmoil - violent agitationcalmness - a feeling of calm; an absence of agitation or excitement | | 4. | agitation - disturbance usually in protest hullabaloo, turmoil, upheaval, excitementdisturbance - the act of disturbing something or someone; setting something in motion | | 5. | agitation - the act of agitating something; causing it to move around (usually vigorously)movement, motility, motion, move - a change of position that does not entail a change of location; "the reflex motion of his eyebrows revealed his surprise"; "movement is a sign of life"; "an impatient move of his hand"; "gastrointestinal motility"shaking - the act of causing something to move up and down (or back and forth) with quick movementsstirring - agitating a liquid with an implement; "constant stirring prevents it from burning on the bottom of the pan"waggle, wag, shake - causing to move repeatedly from side to sideworrying - the act of moving something by repeated tugs or pushes; "vigorous worrying finally loosened the saw" |
agitationnoun1. struggle, fight, battle, conflict, clash, contest, encounter, combat, hostilities, strife, skirmish, tussle Seventy students were injured in the agitation.2. turbulence, rocking, shaking, stirring, stir, tossing, disturbance, upheaval, churning, convulsion Temperature is a measure of agitation of molecules.3. turmoil, worry, trouble, upset, alarm, confusion, excitement, disturbance, distraction, upheaval, stimulation, flurry, outcry, clamour, arousal, ferment, disquiet, commotion, fluster, lather (informal), incitement, tumult, discomposure, tizzy, tizz or tiz-woz (informal) She was in a state of emotional agitation.agitationnoun1. The condition of being physically agitated:commotion, convulsion, turbulence.2. A state of discomposure:dither, fluster, flutter, perturbation, tumult, turmoil, upset.Informal: lather, stew.3. An interruption of regular procedure or of public peace:commotion, disorder, disturbance, helter-skelter, stir, tumult, turbulence, turmoil, uproar.Informal: flap, to-do.Translationsagitate (ˈӕdʒiteit) verb1. to make (someone) excited and anxious. The news agitated her. 使焦慮 使焦虑2. to try to arouse public feeling and action. That group is agitating for prison reform. 煽動 煽动3. to shake. The tree was agitated by the wind. 搖動 摇动ˈagitated adjective 顯得不安 表现出不安的ˌagiˈtation noun 焦慮不安 焦虑,激动不安 ˈagitator noun a person who tries constantly to stir up public feeling. a political agitator. 煽動者 鼓动者Agitation
Agitation a means of politically influencing the masses, a weapon in the struggle between classes and their parties. Agitation is the spreading of a certain idea or slogan that arouses the masses to action. Political agitation always has a class character. Agitation can be carried out through discussions; lectures; speeches at meetings, over the radio, on television; newspaper articles; graphic arts (posters, caricatures, diagrams, paintings, sculpture, and so forth); motion pictures; or the theater. The CPSU uses agitation for the communist education of the workers, for heightening their political consciousness, for explaining the meaning of current events to the working masses, and for mobilizing and organizing them to fulfill the tasks facing the Party, the working class, and all the people. The effectiveness of agitation is determined by the correct relations between the Party, the class, and the masses—that is, by its scientific bases. Propaganda is intimately linked with agitation. The difference between them was defined by G. V. Plekhanov: “. . . the propagandist conveys many ideas to one or a few persons; an agitator conveys only one or a few ideas, but to a great mass of people” (Soch., vol. 3, 1928, p. 400). The ideas put forward in Communist Party agitation find sympathy and support among the masses because they express the vital interests of the people. Communist agitation is distinguished by its high ideological content. “. . .Without a clear, well thought out ideological content,” Lenin pointed out, “agitation degenerates into phrase mongering” (Poln. sobr. soch., 5th ed., vol. 47, p. 74). Closely related to this very important principle of Communist agitation—its high ideological level—is another principle—truthfulness. “We should discuss matters in an open and above-board manner in all of our propaganda and agitation,” Lenin taught. “People who think of politics as petty stratagems that sometimes come down to little more than deceptions should be met with the most resolute condemnation in our midst” (ibid., vol. 43, p. 58). Agitation presupposes an approach that differentiates between various layers of the population, taking into account class structure, cultural level, and occupation. It is based on a careful consideration of people’s moods and desires and on a process of patient explanation and persuasion. It should be presented in an easily understood, concrete, and vivid manner, closely linked with life and the tasks posed by the Party. Agitation is purposeful, has a militant, aggressive nature, exposes those who resist carrying out the Party’s general line, reveals and castigates shortcomings in work, criticizes those who are guilty of these shortcomings, and refuses to dodge difficult questions. M. I. Kalinin advised agitators, “... Never evade a discussion of difficult questions . . . Do not resort to that under any circumstances; do not avoid answering; do not gloss over questions that have been posed” (O politicheskoi agitatsii, 1948, PP. 8–9). Agitation takes various forms. Agitation by word of mouth is not only a means of winning over the masses but also a means of communicating with them and establishing a close interaction between the Party, the working class, and all working people. The most important forms of such agitation are public meetings and assemblies. V. I. Lenin, an unsurpassed agitator himself, attributed enormous importance to that. He considered it the Communist agitator’s imperative duty to carry on explanatory work among the masses every day, to catch their moods, and to simultaneously learn from them. “Personal impact and personal appearances at meetings are tremendously important in politics. Without these there can be no political activity, and writing itself becomes less political” (Poln. sobr. soch., vol. 47, p. 54). Many figures in the CPSU were outstanding agitators—among them M. I. Kalinin, S. M. Kirov, N. K. Krupskaia, A. V. Lunacharskii, G. K. Ordzhonikidze, G. I. Petrovskii, Ia. M. Sverdlov. In contemporary life radio and television along with newspapers have acquired an enormous importance for the agitator; through them millions of people are simultaneously informed about current events. Films are also growing in importance as one of the most powerful means of political agitation. However, agitation by the printed word has certain special features as well as certain advantages over word-of-mouth agitation. Newspapers and magazines penetrate the most remote corners of the country. They provide the reader with the opportunity to cull information at his own convenience and wherever he wishes. Moreover, the reader can concentrate on the material of interest to him and keep it for future use. The total combined circulation of all Soviet newspapers and magazines came to 260 million in 1969, or more than the USSR’s total population. An effective form of printed agitation is the leaflet, which can be issued quickly and in large quantities. The same is true of the wall newspaper, including special flash editions. These forms can be used successfully to popularize exemplary work methods, outstanding workers in socialist competition, and valuable initiatives taken by industrial workers, engineering or technical personnel, or service and office workers. The poster is a widely used form of visual agitation. Wording on posters should be vivid, concise, and persuasive. The text must be brief, purposeful, and memorable. The Soviet agitational poster has enjoyed wide dissemination, especially during the Civil War in 1918–20 and during the Great Patriotic War in 1941–45. These posters were distinguished by their political pertinence, timeliness, and variety of artistic devices used. The Party uses the entire network of cultural-educational institutions to conduct agitation: the houses and palaces of culture, the clubs, the agitpunkts, the libraries, the houses of political education, the agitational trains and cars, and so on. The Twenty-third Congress of the CPSU devoted a great deal of attention to questions of mass agitation. The congress resolution instructs members that “it is necessary to explain the policies of the party profoundly and clearly, without avoiding difficult questions, to be sensitive to the desires and spiritual needs of the popular masses, and to take into consideration the fully developed cultural and educational level of the Soviet people. All political agitation should proceed on the basis that the population should be widely and systematically informed about the country’s political, economic, and cultural life and the international situation” (Materialy XXIII s”ezda KPSS, 1966, p. 199). Communists modify the forms and methods of their agitation according to historical circumstances. An underground communist party cannot use mass public meetings. In such a case the stress must fall on agitation in small groups or by individuals. In circumstances where it is impossible to extensively use such a powerful type of printed agitation as the newspaper, the party resorts to leaflets. Lenin taught that communists must work in every institution and organization that allows the possibility of legally communicating with the workers and hence of extensive agitation. “. . .It is obligatory to work where the masses are,” he wrote. “One must know how to make every kind of sacrifice and to overcome the most difficult obstacles in order to carry on propaganda and agitation systematically, stubbornly, insistently, and patiently in those very institutions, associations, and unions, no matter how reactionary, where the proletarian or semiproletarian masses are found” (Poln. sobr. soch., vol. 41, pp. 36–37). When the Bolsheviks abandoned underground work and came out into the open, the extent of their agitational activities broadened considerably, and the forms and methods of that work became more varied. Mass meetings, rallies, demonstrations, newspapers, leaflets, and posters were utilized by the Party to reach the masses. The Party considers agitational work obligatory for every communist. After the victory of the Great October Revolution, when constructive tasks came to the forefront, the examples given by communists in work acquired agitational and propagandistic importance. “If previously we carried on our propaganda by explaining general truths,” Lenin said, “now we are propagandizing through work “ (ibid., vol. 38, p. 198). The CPSU has accumulated a great deal of practical experience in conducting agitational campaigns related to noteworthy dates and to the completion of specific political or economic tasks. Such revolutionary holidays as the anniversary of the October Revolution, Soviet Army Day, May Day; special days .such as the Day of the Press, Day of the Radio, etc.; days devoted to such workers as miners, oil workers, construction workers, and fishing industry workers—all these serve as focuses for annual agitational campaigns timed for the particular date. Agitational campaigns for particular occasions have also been extensively conducted—for elections to soviets or to people’s courts, for building the defense fund during the Great Patriotic War, for mobilizing youth to develop virgin and unused lands or to participate in major new construction projects, and the like. Other examples are campaigns in response to international events, such as the one in defense of Vietnam against American aggression. With the rising general level of culture and education among the workers, the demands on Party agitation have increased. It has become more profound in content, more varied in its techniques and forms, and more far-reaching in its audience. Party organizations are concentrating on the quality of their agitation. The Party requires that agitation be conducted on the basis of information that will effectively promote the communist education of the people, the formation of a public point of view, and a correct orientation for the Soviet people on questions of the Party’s and state’s domestic and foreign policies in the struggle against hostile ideology. The information in agitation should be theoretically correct and based on reliable sources and scientific facts; it should be well argued and well documented, persuasive, purposeful, and constructed on living examples and facts. Communist agitation is engaged in struggle against hostile, bourgeois agitation, which defends the capitalist system. The struggle between the two ideologies, a manifestation of the class struggle, is reflected in agitational work. Reactionary parties, making use of the mass communications media of the modern world, carry on antipopular, false, and provocative agitation. Communist agitation calls for the struggle against the capitalist system, exposes the slanders and falsifications of the bourgeois ideologists, and mobilizes the masses to deal with revolutionary tasks. REFERENCESLenin, V. I. O propagande i agitatsii, 2nd ed. Moscow, 1962. Krupskaia, N. K. Lenin kak propagandist i agitator. Moscow, 1957. Kalinin, M. I. O nekotorykh voprosakh agitatsii i propagandy. Moscow, 1958. Voprosy ideologicheskoi raboty: Sb. vazhneishikh reshenii KPSS (1954–1961 gg.). Moscow, 1961.V. M. SHCHERBAK agitation1. The process of providing gentle motion in mixed concrete, just sufficient to prevent segregation or loss of plasticity. 2. The mixing and homogenization of slurries or finely ground powders by air or mechanical means.agitation
agitation [aj″ĭ-ta´shun] extreme restlessness, as manifested in depression and other mental disorders. Called also psychomotor agitation.agitation Neurology A state of restless anxiety Clinical ↑ nonpurposeful motor activity, usually associated with internal tension–eg, ants in pants, fidgeting, pacing, pulling of clothesagitation A state of mind, usually due to anxiety or tension, which causes obvious restlessness.Patient discussion about agitationQ. i have restless legs at night . could someone help me with what meds i should take A. I suffered badly from RLS for several years. I then went to see a Neurologist about it. He prescribed a medication for the RLS, and within days the problem was gone. The sense of relief was amazing. However, one has to take the medicine all the time - if I forget to take mine, then the symptoms come back. Nevertheless, it is great to be completely free of the problem ! More discussions about agitationSee AGIT See AGITagitation
Synonyms for agitationnoun struggleSynonyms- struggle
- fight
- battle
- conflict
- clash
- contest
- encounter
- combat
- hostilities
- strife
- skirmish
- tussle
noun turbulenceSynonyms- turbulence
- rocking
- shaking
- stirring
- stir
- tossing
- disturbance
- upheaval
- churning
- convulsion
noun turmoilSynonyms- turmoil
- worry
- trouble
- upset
- alarm
- confusion
- excitement
- disturbance
- distraction
- upheaval
- stimulation
- flurry
- outcry
- clamour
- arousal
- ferment
- disquiet
- commotion
- fluster
- lather
- incitement
- tumult
- discomposure
- tizzy, tizz or tiz-woz
Synonyms for agitationnoun the condition of being physically agitatedSynonyms- commotion
- convulsion
- turbulence
noun a state of discomposureSynonyms- dither
- fluster
- flutter
- perturbation
- tumult
- turmoil
- upset
- lather
- stew
noun an interruption of regular procedure or of public peaceSynonyms- commotion
- disorder
- disturbance
- helter-skelter
- stir
- tumult
- turbulence
- turmoil
- uproar
- flap
- to-do
Synonyms for agitationnoun a mental state of extreme emotional disturbanceRelated Words- mental condition
- mental state
- psychological condition
- psychological state
- perturbation
- upset
- disturbance
- fret
- stew
- swither
- sweat
- lather
- dither
- fuss
- pother
- tizzy
- flap
- tailspin
noun a state of agitation or turbulent change or developmentSynonyms- ferment
- fermentation
- unrest
- tempestuousness
Related Words- Sturm und Drang
- upheaval
- turbulence
noun the feeling of being agitatedRelated Words- feeling
- unrest
- fidget
- fidgetiness
- restlessness
- stewing
- stir
- tumult
- turmoil
Antonymsnoun disturbance usually in protestSynonyms- hullabaloo
- turmoil
- upheaval
- excitement
Related Wordsnoun the act of agitating somethingRelated Words- movement
- motility
- motion
- move
- shaking
- stirring
- waggle
- wag
- shake
- worrying
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