Aún no tenemos significados para "arouse enthusiasm".
1Broad, general aims cannot generate this interest, for abstractions do not arouse enthusiasm.
2To arouse enthusiasm was not his gift and never had been.
3The Nil al-Mubarak itself-the Blessed Nile,-as notably fails too at this season to arouse enthusiasm.
4Does he manage to arouse enthusiasm for orthodox Christianity?
5There were times when Oldfield could even arouse enthusiasm amid the dullest and most unappealing surroundings.
6Indeed, the Republicans seemed unable to arouse enthusiasm.
7She was well educated and could teach splendidly, but she could never arouse enthusiasm in her pupils.
8The great Albert Hall filled is enough of itself to arouse enthusiasm, whatever the object of the gathering may be.
9Such incentives, he thought, were best calculated to arouse enthusiasm in men's souls to engage in battle with the enemy.
10They should arouse enthusiasm.
11I used to play Mendelssohn's "Wedding March" in a manner that never failed to arouse enthusiasm among the patrons of the "Club."
12But her timid unimpressiveness had not aroused enthusiasm or awakened comprehension.
13It was a fascination, a wonder, a delight; it aroused enthusiasm that will never be rekindled on a like occasion.
14"Only erotic idealism," says Ellen Key, "can arouse enthusiasm for chastity."
15The Duke of Rovigo, the Minister of Police, speaks thus in his Memoirs: Marie Louise aroused enthusiasm whenever she opened her mouth.
16The first new formative force was the influence of the classical drama, for which, with other things classical, the Renaissance had aroused enthusiasm.
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Arouse enthusiasm a través del tiempo
Arouse enthusiasm por variante geográfica