Need another word that means the same as “excites”? Find 15 synonyms and 30 related words for “excites” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Excites” are: agitate, charge, charge up, commove, rouse, turn on, stimulate, stir, shake, shake up, energise, energize, arouse, sex, wind up
Excites as a Verb
Definitions of "Excites" as a verb
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “excites” as a verb can have the following definitions:
- Stir the feelings, emotions, or peace of.
- Stir feelings in.
- Produce a magnetic field in.
- Cause to be agitated, excited, or roused.
- Arouse or elicit a feeling.
- Raise to a higher energy level.
- Act as a stimulant.
- Stimulate sexually.
Synonyms of "Excites" as a verb (15 Words)
agitate | Cause to be agitated excited or roused. The thought of questioning Toby agitated him extremely. |
arouse | Evoke or awaken (a feeling, emotion, or response. An ability to influence the audience and to arouse the masses. |
charge | Cause formation of a net electrical charge in or on. He charged her with cleaning up all the files over the weekend. |
charge up | Enter a certain amount as a charge. |
commove | Cause to be agitated, excited, or roused. |
energise | Cause to be alert and energetic. |
energize | Cause to be alert and energetic. People were energized by his ideas. |
rouse | Cause to be agitated excited or roused. Rouse the cable out. |
shake | Shake a body part to communicate a greeting feeling or cognitive state. My faith has been shaken. |
shake up | Shake (a body part) to communicate a greeting, feeling, or cognitive state. |
stimulate | Cause to occur rapidly. The book stimulated her imagination. |
stir | Stir the feelings emotions or peace of. Francis was always stirring trying to score off people. |
turn on | Become officially one year older. |
wind up | Arrange or or coil around. |
Usage Examples of "Excites" as a verb
- Excite the audience.
- Excite the neurons.
- Excite the atoms.
Associations of "Excites" (30 Words)
agitate | Cause to be agitated excited or roused. The thought of questioning Toby agitated him extremely. |
agitative | Causing or tending to cause anger or resentment. |
animate | Endowed with feeling and unstructured consciousness. Gods in a wide variety of forms both animate and inanimate. |
arousal | A state of heightened physiological activity. Sexual arousal in dreams is common. |
arouse | To begin moving. I was surprised to find that this look aroused me. |
awaken | Rouse from sleep; cause to stop sleeping. He sighed but did not awaken. |
brace | Support or hold steady and make steadfast with or as if with a brace. A neck brace. |
bubble | Rise in bubbles or as if in bubbles. They are not on tour packages seeing foreign ports from a bubble. |
effervescence | Bubbles in a liquid; fizz. The effervescence of sparkling wine. |
encourage | Persuade (someone) to do or continue to do something by giving support and advice. We were encouraged by the success of this venture. |
energize | Give vitality and enthusiasm to. Floor sensors are energized by standing passengers. |
enkindle | Cause to start burning. The glare from its enkindled roof illumined its innermost recesses. |
fizz | The quality of being fizzy effervescence. Carbide lamps fizzed in the darkness. |
foment | Bathe with warm water or medicated lotions. His legs should be fomented. |
froth | Become bubbly or frothy or foaming. The froth of party politics. |
incite | Provoke or stir up. Incite a riot. |
induce | Cause to arise. The ads induced me to buy a VCR. |
inflame | Become inflamed get sore. High fines further inflamed public feelings. |
inspire | Give rise to. He inspired his students with a vision of freedom. |
instigate | Incite someone to do something, especially something bad. They instigated a reign of terror. |
invoke | Call earnestly for. He invoked the law that would save him. |
motivate | Give an incentive for action. He was primarily motivated by the desire for profit. |
provocative | Intentionally arousing sexual desire. Provocative Irish tunes which compel the hearers to dance. |
provoke | Evoke or provoke to appear or occur. Rachel refused to be provoked. |
rouse | Cause to be agitated excited or roused. The crowds were roused to fever pitch by the drama of the race. |
spur | Strike with a spur. Spur horses. |
stimulate | Stir the feelings, emotions, or peace of. The courses stimulate a passion for learning. |
stir | An act of stirring food or drink. Desmond stirred his tea and ate a biscuit. |
wake | Cause to become awake or conscious. He was attending a friend s wake. |
waken | Cause to become awake or conscious. She wakened the child and dressed her. |