angariate

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English

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Etymology

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From Latin angariō, angariāte (to compel).

Verb

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angariate (third-person singular simple present angariates, present participle angariating, simple past and past participle angariated)

  1. (obsolete, transitive) To compel or force (someone).
    • 1609, William Barlow, An Ansvver to a Catholike English-man, London:  [] Thomas Haneland for Mathew Law, page 140:
      Howſoeuer, if parting with a peece of money be ſuch a Preſſure to the husband for the Wines wilfulnes, what a miſerable Preſſing Crueltie was that to burne a woman great with Childe, which opening the wombe in the torments , and comming foorth, was Angariated as throwen backe into the fire, to bee conſumed with the Mother?
    • 1635, Iohn Downe, “To the Reader”, in A Treatise of the Trve Natvre and Definition of Justifying Faith,  [] Iohn Lichfield for Edward Foreſt, page A2:
      Wherefore I could not but with Iacobs Angel giue them leaue to prevaile, & yeeld ſo farre unto their earneſt requeſt, that being angariated to goe but one mile, I was notwithstanding content to goe with them more then twaine , preaching(before my departure thence)divers ſermons vnto them.
    • 1676, Andreas Rivetus [i.e., André Rivet], Mr. Smirke, or, the Divine in Mode, page 12:
      Therefore,though Chriſt hath commanded his Followers (ſo it be not I ſuppoſe out of his Way) that if any man preſs them to go one mile, they ſhould go two, yet it is not wiſdom in the Church to pretend to, or however to exerciſe, that Power of Angariating men further than their occaſions or underſtandings will permit.
    • 1918, “Other Sheep Not of This Fold” (chapter XVII), in Pastor Halloft: A Story of Clerical Life, Longmans, Green and Co., page 157:
      Accordingly, he made up his mind to acquire a knowledge of the Hungarian dialects. Later on he sought to do the same with Italian; and he angariated his assistant at the church into becoming interested in the same studies.

Italian

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Etymology 1

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Verb

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angariate

  1. inflection of angariare:
    1. second-person plural present indicative/subjunctive
    2. second-person plural imperative

Etymology 2

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Participle

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angariate f pl

  1. feminine plural of angariato

Latin

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Verb

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angariāte

  1. second-person plural present active imperative of angariō