Agitation in a sentence as a noun

And if the bicycle causes the same car to pass multiple times, the agitation of the driver goes up.

That's called brake check, you might do it a few times to show your agitation to the driver tailgating you.

Jails are very tense environments and they don't need more agitation than they already have.

Buy me a beer!I would recommend strongly against a startup, given your level of agitation.

"He glanced up at me, his eyes alight with what I’d come to recognize as a sort of pre-tantrum agitation.

You simply can't mix the CO2 effectively without agitation.

In the establishment of the regime, it was deemed necessary to control agitation and maintain order.

More effective carbonation is achieved through agitation during the process.

The wage suppression and agitation for imported labor has cultural impacts more serious than supply and demand.

Production is changing but there will be a revival of organization, education and then agitation.

If you happen to be reading The Communist Manifesto, it's a political pamphlet for agitation and not a work of philosophy.

Posting voting polls in which your favorite party scores well, especially directly before elections, falls under political agitation category.

Probably the best idea would be to go swimming in the ocean with whomever you'd like to contact, since salt water and mechanical agitation probably diminish the reliability and functionality of most listening devices.

Revolutionary agitation usually comes when hard-working, intelligent, and previously fortunate people become out of power and hit a ceiling, either because society is deeply stagnant or because they're actively being deprived of autonomy.

Marx, for example, was very clear in his agitation against the kind of moronic vilification demonstrated in this text: The typical capitalist, and those aiding him, according to Marx, is no more evil than the worker he oppresses - capitalist and worker alike for the most part are trapped in the same machine, and have little choice but to stick to their roles: A capitalist that stops exploiting labour will fail, and end up a labourer by necessity himself.

Agitation definitions

noun

a mental state of extreme emotional disturbance

noun

a state of agitation or turbulent change or development; "the political ferment produced new leadership"; "social unrest"

See also: ferment fermentation tempestuousness unrest

noun

the feeling of being agitated; not calm

noun

disturbance usually in protest

See also: excitement turmoil upheaval hullabaloo

noun

the act of agitating something; causing it to move around (usually vigorously)