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The word for today is…

inspire (verb):

1a: to spur on : impel, motivate
b: to exert an animating, enlivening, or exalting influence on
c: affect
d: to influence, move, or guide by divine or supernatural inspiration
2a: bring about, occasion
b: incite
3a: to draw forth or bring out
b: to communicate to an agent supernaturally
4: inhale
5: to spread (rumor) by indirect means or through the agency of another
6a archaic : to breathe or blow into or upon
b archaic : to infuse (something, such as life) by breathing

Source : Merriam -Webster

Etymology : When inspire first came into use in the 14th century it had a meaning it still carries in English today: “to influence, move, or guide by divine or supernatural influence or action.” It’s this use that we see in phrases like “scripture inspired by God,” where the idea is that God shaped the scripture in an active and explicit way.

The meaning is a metaphorical extension of the word’s Latin root: inspirare means “to breathe or blow into.” The metaphor is a powerful one, with the very breath of a divine or supernatural force asserted as being at work.

The metaphor developed further, with inspire gaining similar but somewhat weaker meanings. Someone who is inspired by a particular artist, for example, is influenced by that artist in a way that animates or intensifies their own work. Something that inspires people to action motivates them. And if we say that something has inspired an emotion, thought, or idea, we are saying that it somehow had a part in its coming to be.

The word inspire has also drawn on the meaning of its literal root over the years, with meanings like “inhale,” “to breathe or blow into or upon,” and “to infuse (something, such as life) by breathing,” but these meanings are not commonly encountered in modern use.

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