Definitions Related words Mentions History

Literary notes about Goading (AI summary)

In literature, “goading” is often employed to convey a deliberate act of incitement—whether physical, emotional, or psychological—that rouses a character into action or reaction. Authors use the term to depict both tangible prodding, as seen when a bull is urged onward by a physical spur [1], and abstract provocation that stokes inner turmoil or defiant resolve, as when a character is pushed from inertia into desperate resolve [2] or anger [3]. It functions as a catalyst, intensifying conflict by highlighting the relentless pressure exerted, whether through teasing banter that provokes an adverse response [4] or the subtle pushing of one’s inner impulses towards rebellion or transformation [5][6].
  1. The plough were drawing, and the furrow'd glebe Was black behind them, while with goading wand
    — from The Iliad by Homer
  2. She was goading him, in his darkness whither he had withdrawn himself like a sick dog, to die or recover as his strength should prove.
    — from The Trespasser by D. H. (David Herbert) Lawrence
  3. "I am going away after to-night," he said hoarsely; for the sight of her beauty was goading him almost to despair.
    — from Adrien Leroy by Charles Garvice
  4. “You will have the English magistrates after you, Leentje,” was all he said, purposely goading her.
    — from The Shadow of the Past by F. E. Mills (Florence Ethel Mills) Young
  5. And a sudden wild wave of rebellion went through her, goading her into action at last.
    — from The Hundredth Chance by Ethel M. (Ethel May) Dell
  6. The very fact that she shrank from him, only seemed to madden him, and it was as though he tried to soothe his own goaded feelings by goading hers.
    — from Paddy-The-Next-Best-Thing by Gertrude Page

More usage examples

Also see: Google, News, Images, Wikipedia, Reddit, BlueSky


Home   Reverse Dictionary / Thesaurus   Datamuse   Word games   Spruce   Feedback   Dark mode   Random word   Help


Color thesaurus

Use OneLook to find colors for words and words for colors

See an example

Literary notes

Use OneLook to learn how words are used by great writers

See an example

Word games

Try our innovative vocabulary games

Play Now

Read the latest OneLook newsletter issue: Threepeat Redux