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Solicit   /səlˈɪsɪt/   Listen
Solicit

verb
(past & past part. solicited; pres. part. soliciting)
1.
Make a solicitation or entreaty for something; request urgently or persistently.  Synonyms: beg, tap.  "My neighbor keeps soliciting money for different charities"
2.
Make amorous advances towards.  Synonyms: court, romance, woo.
3.
Approach with an offer of sexual favors.  Synonyms: accost, hook.  "The young man was caught soliciting in the park"
4.
Incite, move, or persuade to some act of lawlessness or insubordination.
5.
Make a solicitation or petition for something desired.



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"Solicit" Quotes from Famous Books



... circumstances, by which he maintains both defence and attack. Half of the long apologia is a criticism not of those who feast fools in their folly, but of the fools who require a caterer for the feast; it is a study of the methods by which dupes solicit and educate a knave. The other half is Sludge's plea that, knave though he be, he is not wholly knave; and Browning, while absolutely rejecting the doctrine of so called spiritualism, is prepared to admit that in the composition of a Sludge there enters a certain ...
— Robert Browning • Edward Dowden

... curious remarks recorded in this book, such as an entry dated 26th June, 1857, which says:—"Tossed by, and out of the Bull with a crumpled horn, as no one would lend me five shillings, therefore obliged to solicit the benefit of this excellent charity." There is an admirable testimony in Latin, by the late Bishop of Lincoln, Dr. Wordsworth, to the usefulness of the institution, which, dated 23rd August, 1883, is as follows:—"Esto perpetua obstantibus Caritatis Commissionariis." ...
— A Week's Tramp in Dickens-Land • William R. Hughes

... you, if you did, I would stop it till I had made my Comments. I suppose you have not had time to do what you proposed, or are you overcome with the Flood of bad Latin I poured upon you? Well: don't be surprised (vext, you won't be) if I solicit Fraser for room for a few Quatrains in English Verse, however—with only such an Introduction as you and Sprenger give me—very short—so as to leave you to say all that is Scholarly if you will. I hope this is not very Cavalier of me. But in truth I take old Omar rather more as my property ...
— Letters of Edward FitzGerald - in two volumes, Vol. 1 • Edward FitzGerald

... say that, as to the latter, I am much vexed if my course of conduct is still obscure, amid if it is not known at Rome that not a penny has been exacted from my province except for the payment of debt; and I have explained to him that it is improper both for me to solicit the money and for him to receive it; and I have advised him (for I am really attached to him) that, after prosecuting others, he should be extra-careful as to his own conduct. As to the former request, I have said that it is inconsistent with my character ...
— Letters of Cicero • Marcus Tullius Cicero

... America,—who knows? She certainly found Peter, the civilian, more attractive, for there really was nothing English to compare him with, and she had something of the same feeling in her friendship for Jenny, except the patronage which Jenny seemed to solicit, and ...
— Tales of Trail and Town • Bret Harte


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