Stirred in a sentence as an adjective

I'd like to see the pot stirred a bit on this one.

The verse runs like this: It's easy to keep hold of what hasn't stirred, easy to plan what hasn't occurred.

All entropy sources are stirred into the same entropy pool.

Anytime nationalistic pride is stirred hard, it's hard to be not biased.

Linode, on the other hand, has never stirred up drama or ******** since I have started working with them.

Even if you did hate him and the press he stirred up, the best way to make it go away is to completely ignore it.

"It would also make it nearly impossible to cook anything that needed to be stirred to prevent burning.

The only music capable of moving and touching us is that which flows from the depths of a composers soul when he is stirred by inspiration.

It boils down to "Ted stirred up some **** in the node community, which I like to troll because I wrote my own programming language and see node as the enemy.

You wrote in another comment that you think you unintentionally stirred things up with your comment on empathy, but I'm going to pile on anyway.

Explain "stirred the pot." Most companies hire new employees to perform certain tasks, not "stir the pot."Unless you have something specific to share as to how or why Pivotal wronged you, this blog post comes off as vindictive and, frankly, not very well thought out.

News reports about you will forever read "Paul Graham, the investor who stirred controversy by saying that foreign accents are bad for startups, ate breakfast today".

Judging from what I can see right now, these revelations have stirred up some unrest among EU politicians[1], most noticeably among the generally US-friendly right.

The original story has already circulated the web and stirred anger and mistrust in a sufficient amount of people who will never read this common sense follow-up.

Exactly this!It almost feels like a political issue--with all of the longterm controversy and animosity that Facebook has stirred up amongst us, we've been quietly waiting for something like this to happen.

Jeremiah talks about how he "stirred the pot on the distinction between corporate and startup marketing", which sounds to me like he was really much more interested in the consulting branch of the company and the startups involved therein, not the cloud services part.

You've got Shackleton's legendary return to civilization, and what I think is one of the more heroic and tragic pieces of writing, Robert Falcon Scott's Message to the Public:"We took risks, we knew we took them; things have come out against us, and therefore we have no cause for complaint, but bow to the will of Providence, determined still to do our best to the last....Had we lived, I should have had a tale to tell of the hardihood, endurance, and courage of my companions which would have stirred the heart of every Englishman.

Stirred definitions

adjective

being excited or provoked to the expression of an emotion; "too moved to speak"; "very touched by the stranger's kindness"

See also: affected touched

adjective

emotionally aroused

See also: stimulated aroused

adjective

set into a usually circular motion in order to mix or blend