Rouse in a sentence as a verb

I turn my lights on in the morning before I wake up to help rouse me.

It has a blazing graphics card but the fan noise could rouse a coma patient.

That's not very reassuring, and is one of the many things that just rouse fear.

Will adding in obscenities will rouse up some big HR kerfuffle?

I found it helped to rouse into an alert state, as you have to think about breaking the word into chunks.

Who then pander, rabble-rouse, and pick narrow issues to speak loudly about to raise money.

What if we can fully rouse patients with this treatment, but only temporarily?

The default status of man is waking sleep, one needs inner spiritual work to rouse themselves out of that state.

It's a bit of a rouse to say that they never agreed to Net Neutrality so shouldn't be beholden to it.

All the domains are squatted and up until a month or two ago you could steal anyone's domain and make it your own, it took a public full disclosure to rouse the developers enough to get it fixed.

So, I decided to word it differently to assure that this isn't perceived as an attack but rather an attempt to rouse whatever it is inside of us that encourages us to aspire to be better.

In cases where dingbat representatives try to rabble-rouse for unwarranted treason charges, you can see why the founders were smart to divest the Legislature of the power to enforce the laws they enact.

"Hippie: "By work ethic, you mean the ability to rouse 8,000 people from corporate housing and immediately put them to work on back-to-back 16 hour shifts, all because you couldn't get your engineering spec done in a reasonable time?

So remembering Fisher all by itself should have been enough to rouse at least a few worries as household debt rose dramatically relative to income, not just in America, but in a number of European nations too.

I think the current setup provides the wrong incentives: it encourages politicians to care about how they can rouse up enough to come to the polls or demoralize enough to keep away, in addition to or at the expense of reaching out to all constituents.

He knew what those jubilant crowds did not know but could have learned from books: that the plague bacillus never dies or disappears for good; that it can lie dormant for years and years in furniture and linen- chests; that it bides its time in bedrooms, cellars, trunks, and bookshelves; and that perhaps the day would come when, for the bane and the enlightening of men, it would rouse up its rats again and send them forth to die in a happy city.

Rouse definitions

verb

become active; "He finally bestirred himself"

See also: bestir

verb

force or drive out; "The police routed them out of bed at 2 A.M."

verb

cause to be agitated, excited, or roused; "The speaker charged up the crowd with his inflammatory remarks"

See also: agitate charge commove excite

verb

cause to become awake or conscious; "He was roused by the drunken men in the street"; "Please wake me at 6 AM."

See also: awaken wake waken arouse