exhortatory - meaning and definition. What is exhortatory
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What (who) is exhortatory - definition


Exhortatory         
  • ''The Good Advice'' (original title: ''Le bon conseil''), by [[Jean-Baptiste Madou]].
FORM OF RELATING PERSONAL OR INSTITUTIONAL OPINIONS, BELIEF SYSTEMS, VALUES, RECOMMENDATIONS OR GUIDANCE ABOUT CERTAIN SITUATIONS RELAYED IN SOME CONTEXT TO ANOTHER PERSON, GROUP OR PARTY OFTEN OFFERED AS A GUIDE TO ACTION AND/OR CONDUCT
Exhorting; Exhortational; Exhortatory; Exhortation; Exhorted; Exhorts
·adj Of or pertaining to exhortation; hortatory.
exhortatory         
  • ''The Good Advice'' (original title: ''Le bon conseil''), by [[Jean-Baptiste Madou]].
FORM OF RELATING PERSONAL OR INSTITUTIONAL OPINIONS, BELIEF SYSTEMS, VALUES, RECOMMENDATIONS OR GUIDANCE ABOUT CERTAIN SITUATIONS RELAYED IN SOME CONTEXT TO ANOTHER PERSON, GROUP OR PARTY OFTEN OFFERED AS A GUIDE TO ACTION AND/OR CONDUCT
Exhorting; Exhortational; Exhortatory; Exhortation; Exhorted; Exhorts
a.
Exhortative, hortatory.
Advice (opinion)         
  • ''The Good Advice'' (original title: ''Le bon conseil''), by [[Jean-Baptiste Madou]].
FORM OF RELATING PERSONAL OR INSTITUTIONAL OPINIONS, BELIEF SYSTEMS, VALUES, RECOMMENDATIONS OR GUIDANCE ABOUT CERTAIN SITUATIONS RELAYED IN SOME CONTEXT TO ANOTHER PERSON, GROUP OR PARTY OFTEN OFFERED AS A GUIDE TO ACTION AND/OR CONDUCT
Exhorting; Exhortational; Exhortatory; Exhortation; Exhorted; Exhorts
Advice (also called exhortation) is a form of relating personal or institutional opinions, belief systems, values, recommendations or guidance about certain situations relayed in some context to another person, group or party. Advice is often offered as a guide to action and/or conduct.
Examples of use of exhortatory
1. But the mentions of Africa in the Queen‘s speech were vague and exhortatory.
2. Even where it expands private choice lowering the age of consent for homosexuals its arguments are exhortatory rather than libertarian.
3. Think of the thousands of staged events, the tens of thousands of times she has pretended to be delighted to see someone she doesn‘t know, the hundreds of thousands times she has recited empty clich'4;żs and exhortatory banalities, the millions of photos she has posed for in which she is supposed to appear empathetic or tough, the billions of politically opportune half–truths that have bounced around her head.
4. Those who remembered the same paper‘s final words of advice to Mrs Thatcher on the night she finally got bumped – rule as a triumvirate with John Major and Douglas Hurd and ‘you can still win the Tories an election‘ – might have been leading the thumb–suckers by this stage. ‘Exhortatory constructions tend to read naively‘, in the non–thunderous words of another of its ex–editors, Simon Jenkins.