| 1. | to anger, enrage, exasperate, or vex. |
| 2. | to stir up, arouse, or call forth (feelings, desires, or activity): The mishap provoked a hearty laugh. |
| 3. | to incite or stimulate (a person, animal, etc.) to action. |
| 4. | to give rise to, induce, or bring about: What could have provoked such an incident? |
| 5. | Obsolete. to summon. |
pro·voke (prə-vōk') tr.v. pro·voked, pro·vok·ing, pro·vokes
[Middle English provoken, from Old French provoquer, from Latin prōvocāre, to challenge : prō-, forth; see pro-1 + vocāre, to call; see wekw- in Indo-European roots.] Synonyms: These verbs mean to move a person to action or feeling or to summon something into being by so moving a person. Provoke often merely states the consequences produced: "Let my presumption not provoke thy wrath" (Shakespeare). "A situation which in the country would have provoked meetings" (John Galsworthy). |