English to Portuguese Dictionary evoke

evoke

evocar
definition
verb
the sight of American asters evokes pleasant memories of childhood
bring or recall to the conscious mind.
To evoke the Deities, raise the clasped hands to the center of the forehead.
invoke (a spirit or deity).
translation of 'evoke'
verb
invocar,
suscitar,
evocar
example
I really need to jog my memory to 'evoke' images of the place.
The representation of the disabled has historically been heavily stereotyped with aversive images that 'evoke' pity and fear.
Peaches 'evoke' memories and bring out the best of summertime activities.
Full of existential angst and loneliness, her paintings are able to 'evoke' an empathetic response from the viewer.
A second argument holds that a modified procedure might 'evoke' negative responses in patients, leading to a decreased willingness to participate in future research.
Clearly, these kinds of images of the miserable at play will 'evoke' horror in the minds of every sane person.
It's going to the edge to spontaneously improvise and 'evoke' the inner spirit.
To 'evoke' the Deities, raise the clasped hands to the center of the forehead.
Jewels, which have a definite presence in most of the counters, 'evoke' a good response from the customers.
In subjects with reduced androgen levels, stimuli that normally 'evoke' a stress response are significantly less potent.
So these things have to be handled very, very delicately, and the way I'm trying to do that is to 'evoke' a sense of memory as opposed to a sense of anger.
The narration, music and images combined to 'evoke' fear and loathing in my impressionable pre-teen mind!
Is it possible the movie set out to 'evoke' a cinematic response in the spectator to mimic the characters' internal quandaries?
They are gruesome and 'evoke' fear in the minds of their devotees; not love.
He thought that a circle of a particular colour touching a triangle at a specific juncture could 'evoke' the same response in the viewer as the hand of God touching Adam in the Sistine chapel.
It captures honest moments of weirdness, but it also manipulates images and music to 'evoke' emotion.
Note that if you do choose to 'evoke' the deity, you will enter a Gnostic trance and you may therefore forget what happened while you were under the trance.
The number of stimuli per 10-sec stimulation train that failed to 'evoke' any muscular response was recorded.
Stress related factors might also influence interpretations of abuse, and 'evoke' different responses in the victims of abuse.
Despite its subtitle it is essentially a historical register of events, not (as its blurb suggests) an 'evocation' .
The show was a reminder and 'evocation' of the great days of rail travel in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
On seeing the picture, it 'evoked' pleasant memories of times spent at school in the past.
Exchanging stories and memories of the lost servicemen have 'evoked' complex feelings, they said.
The historical interpretation of phenomena and the 'evocations' of collective historical memory influence the manner in which violent events are generated, confronted, and understood.
The result 'evoked' an angry response from demonstrators outside.
The principal reason for this is that poetry 'evokes' a pre-determined response.
Less easily quantified will be the emotions 'evoked' by the memory of Persian Punch, who won 20 races in his career, the last of them on the Heath exactly a year ago.
To my mind it succeeds in 'evoking' the excitement and interest inherent in mathematics but so often overshadowed by complexity and social fear.
Necromancy is only black magic, because it neither 'evokes' spirits or heals.
Coleman notes the ‘ritualization’ of repetitive language in Wideman's black idiom and traces that use of language to ‘its nonlinear function as 'evoker' of the timeless qualities and values of the black community’.
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