Stoke in a sentence as a verb

Or did the grue perhaps stoke a fire?

But that's their model: stoke interest in a business, take profit, and get out.

I have a friend who sometimes asks, to stoke conversation: "What's one thing you believe that no one else does?

Or is this attempt to stoke revolutionary sentiment?

The easiest way is to do a torpedo stroke, which is like an alternating front crawl stoke / back stroke, with your body rotating around its long axis with each stroke.

The narcissism of small differences, loudmouths with a chip on their shoulder, and plain old confused angry people serve to stoke the fires of internecine warfare.

But then you have to worry about the dk CO's that would pretend to look it up, then give us faulty information just to stoke the flames of discord amongst us inmates.

And they had better.”Always very pleased to see his name pop up when this sort of thing makes news, as he never seems to offer a quote that can be used to stoke unreasonable fear.

Seems to use the psychological technique of intermittent rewards to encourage continued clicking of "stoke the fire.

Instead of using that as fuel for empathy and character-building, they use it as a weapon and turn it outwards to attack others, or inside to stoke their own misery.

The last time the public had that sudden sense of vulnerability, the government did everything in their power to stoke those anaphylactic fires.

Talking about Wright, Roberts and Molyneux is a way to stoke the nostalgia, and blanket blasting the industry with contentious quotes is just a way to get that free press.

Or does it just serve to stoke your righteous indignation over getting fooled by yet another politician?When can we stop bickering over whose goddamned fault it is and start, you know, fixing it?

"Furthermore, what is the point of any pornography if not to stoke the fires of sexual desire"I could just as easily say: what is the point of any pornography if not to satisfy sexual desire?

This letter indicates a tactic meant to stoke other legislators' outrage ahead of the upcoming Congress, as opposed to a strategy of opposing NSA spying specifically on lawmakers.

Stoke definitions

verb

stir up or tend; of a fire