Motivar in english
To motivate
pronunciation: tumoʊtəveɪt part of speech: none
pronunciation: tumoʊtəveɪt part of speech: none
In gestures
motivar = cause ; lead + Nombre + on ; motivate ; prompt ; be fired with ; actuate ; fuel.
Example: As usage of the language causes terms to become anachronistic, or as increases in our level of awareness reveal undesirable connotations, we seek to change subject heading terms.Example: While poking about among books children naturally discuss those they have read, swopping responses, and so leading each other on.Example: It is, in general, quite difficult to motivate an administrator to divert the resources necessary to upgrade an existing file of poor quality.Example: An earlier leakage had prompted library staff to make arrangements with a nearby firm of book conservation specialists in the event of a further disaster.Example: Librarians and bibliographers are as deeply fired with the idealistic fervour which is alleged to have imbued the medieval knights.Example: CRG has always remained an amateur organization in the sense that it does not dispose of large funds, and its members are actuated by enthusiasm for the subject rather than by the hope of wealth.Example: This is in line with recent trends in the historical sciences generally fuelled by the feeling that in the past historians did not pay enough attention to what is, after all, the majority of humanity.