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provocation

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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English

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Etymology

From Middle English provocacioun, from Old French provocacion, from Late Latin prōvocātiō, prōvocātiōnem, from Latin prōvocō. Doublet of provokatsiya.

Pronunciation

Noun

provocation (countable and uncountable, plural provocations)

  1. The act of provoking, inciting or annoying someone into doing something
  2. Something that provokes; a provocative act
  3. (emergency medicine) The second step in OPQRST regarding the investigation of what makes the symptoms MOI or NOI improve or deteriorate.
    When it's time to check for provocation, ask the patient about what makes their chief complaint better or worse.

Usage notes

Usually followed by of, to, or for: provocation of violence (less common:to, rare:for), provocation to war (less common: of, for).

Translations

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French

Etymology

Borrowed from Late Latin provocātiōnem, from Latin provocō.

Pronunciation

Noun

provocation f (plural provocations)

  1. provocation

Descendants

  • Polish: prowokacja
  • Turkish: provokasyon

Further reading

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