stirring
emocionante
definition
verb
stir the batter until it is just combined
move a spoon or other implement around in (a liquid or other substance) in order to mix it thoroughly.
nothing stirred except the wind
move or cause to move slightly.
noun
the first stirrings of anger
an initial sign of activity, movement, or emotion.
adjective
stirring songs
causing great excitement or strong emotion; rousing.
I am now living in north-eastern Tasmania, a place called Deviot and our home overlooks a stirring river called the Tamar.
moving briskly; active.
translation of 'stirring'
adjective
turbulento,
inspirador,
emocionante
example
Nonetheless, for a band that was once so mellow they called one of their songs ‘Nyquil,’ this is 'stirring' stuff.
Like his Uncle Billy, he had strong convictions and the gift of a 'stirring' voice.
While they draw you in by making you feel part of the 'stirring' action, great football films also produce an emotional connection.
Never have I listened to an album with such a range of emotions on top of such 'stirring' music.
The skirl of the bagpipes provided a 'stirring' backdrop, and his skin tingled with excitement.
I am now living in north-eastern Tasmania, a place called Deviot and our home overlooks a 'stirring' river called the Tamar.
Ironically, it was also he who wrote a 'stirring' love song, lamenting the end of the wining, an ode to Carnival itself, as he marked its passing.
In the middle of a 'stirring' love song, he arrives fashionably late.
There's nothing wrong with being afraid - such a 'stirring' event produces a wide roller-coaster of emotions.
In unison, we all broke out in a 'stirring' rendition of the Canadian national anthem.
Dressed in a simple and austere white, the students filled the auditorium with their 'stirring' songs.
So when it comes to picking a rousing anthem, we're somewhat stuck for 'stirring' subject matter.
Those magnificent men in the Maroon, those glorious memories, and those vignettes from the past of 'stirring' feats and heady conquests.
Patriotism becomes articulated through passion, and passion can indeed spur the emergence of 'stirring' words.
His lack of stage fright is combined with an equal desire to inspire audiences, either through a motivating speech or a 'stirring' song.
She presents this 'stirring' song cycle in praise of St Kilda's unique mixture of gravel, asphalt, sand and loose chippings.
The show is packed full of 'stirring' anthems, plaintive laments and unforgettable love songs sung by a first-class cast and backed by the Lyric Opera Orchestra.
Congratulations and thank you to all those talented actors, musicians and movie makers involved for such an emotionally 'stirring' and historical event.
Rock's spiritual, political and emotional content was 'stirring' and important, and it gave us strength.
Next came scores of Yeshiva students singing 'stirring' songs about the greatness of the Torah.
There are lots of 'stirring' , wonderful songs on All In A Dream.
The trick is to put those memories away until you can really recognize them as memories, not as 'stirrings' of rekindled emotion.
But it is in his awkwardness, his deflations, his retractions, and his sudden shifts midstream that his poems renounce the intoxications of bravura in favor of something darker and 'stirringly' ungoverned.
His rigorous non-narrative dances do not evade, but more deeply express, the universal 'stirrings' of such tales.
It is likely to be even more in the news, for there are quietly insistent 'stirrings' that this silent Pennsylvania field is not receiving the attention that it deserves.
If a key to change is political activism, then what better than political art to catalyse activist 'stirrings' in sleeping souls.
He shook his head, feeling 'stirrings' of emotions he hadn't felt for too long.
He once spoke 'stirringly' of standing in Africa and hearing the magnificent anthems of liberation and seeing the many coloured flags that proclaim and celebrate independence and triumph.
But in the past few years, there have been 'stirrings' of change.
It leads into Evelyn Street on the 'stirringly' named Britannia Estate, which incorporates Pepys Street, De Quincey Mews, Hardy Avenue and other narrow alleys celebrating Southey, Constable and the ‘cockney poet’, John Keats.
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