Encara no tenim significats per a "arouse public".
1They hope to arouse public opinion there by lectures and other means.
2And now nothing remained to do but to arouse public curiosity and interest.
3Mr. Barnum's efforts to arouse public interest in her had not been in vain.
4Again we lay down our tools and seek to arouse public sympathy in our behalf.
5But Mr. Hopkins, his opponent, has used this very thing to arouse public sentiment against him.
6The audiences were small and it was evident that something must be done to arouse public interest.
7The last of the great contests to arouse public enthusiasm was the London to Manchester Flight of 1910.
8Banner headlines of "20 dead yesterday due to smoking" would, I am sure, arouse public disquiet.
9And Fulkerson thinks that the novelty of the thing would pique public curiosity, if it didn't arouse public sympathy.
10Desiring his aid to arouse public sentiment, depressed since the fall of New Orleans, I stopped to see him.
11Only a coward or a villain would take this method to arouse public curiosity, and perhaps create public suspicion.
12Soon after the sultan had trouble in Armenia, which was Russia's latest resort to arouse public opinion against the Turk.
13This book is intended to arouse public sentiment, spread accurate knowledge, check rash enthusiasm, and promote well-informed and resolute action.
14The inevitable effect of the monitory, when it was drawn up with a bias, was to arouse public hatred against the accused.
15This shows how necessary it is that any new view should be explained at considerable length in order to arouse public attention.
16We must arouse public opinion, until city, State, and national officials shall no longer dare to neglect the execution of the law.
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