1. exhorting - Noun
2. exhorting - Verb
of Exhort
Source: Webster's dictionaryAn approaching procession of pilgrims sings a hymn ("Glory to Thee, Creator on high"), exhorting the people to crush the spirit of anarchy in the land, take up holy icons, and go to meet the Tsar. Source: Internet
A Ziggelaar (1983), article cited above, see page 209. The papal bull ( Inter gravissimas ) was issued on 24 February 1582, ordering Catholic clergy to adopt the new calendar, and exhorting Catholic sovereigns to do the same. Source: Internet
Maddon partially blamed the Angels’ dugout for exhorting Rengifo to run, which might not have been an issue in another season. Source: Internet
Mr. Otaola has become a boisterous Trump evangelist, exhorting his audience to beware the Democrats’ “socialist” tendencies. Source: Internet
He concluded that the collection was redacted to be a retrospective of the failure of the Davidic covenant, exhorting Israel to trust in God alone in a non-messianic future. Source: Internet
There are also letters of dictators and tyrants like Mao Zedong that launches the Cultural Revolution by exhorting students to attack their superiors. Source: Internet