elicited meaning

 Definitions from Oxford LanguagesLearn more

 
elicit
इˈलिसिट्‌
formal
verb
past tenseelicitedpast participleelicited
to manage to get information, facts, a reaction, etc. from somebody
किसी से सूचना, तथ्‍य आदि निकलवाना
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3 days ago — to get or produce something, especially information or a reaction: elicit a response from Have you managed to elicit a response from them yet?
1. : to call forth or draw out (something, such as information or a response) her remarks elicited cheers. 2. : to draw forth or bring out (something latent or ...
to get a student to provide or remember a fact, response, etc. rather than telling them the answer: The teacher elicits definitions from the students.
Other forms: elicited; eliciting; elicits. When you elicit, you're bringing out a response of some sort. A good comedian elicits a lot of laughs.
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4 days ago — adjective drawn or brought out in response to something: For this language exercise, show the students a common device such as a can opener.
Some common synonyms of elicit are educe, evoke, extort, and extract. While all these words mean to draw out something hidden, latent, or reserved.
The word or phrase elicited refers to derive by reason, or deduce (a principle) or construe (a meaning), or call forth (emotions, feelings, and responses). See ...
​elicit something (from somebody) to get information or a reaction from somebody, often with difficulty. I could elicit no response from him.
verb (used with object). to draw or bring out or forth; educe; evoke: to elicit the truth;. to elicit a response with a question.
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