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Discover LudwigThe phrase "arouse one" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where you want to express the idea of stimulating or awakening someone's feelings, emotions, or desires.
Example: "The beautiful melody seemed to arouse one’s deepest emotions, bringing tears to their eyes."
Alternatives: "stimulate someone" or "awaken someone".
Exact(7)
This leads them into a dicussion of earlier summers at overnight camps, and the two try to arouse one another's jealosy with talk of past camp romances.
In addition, the President, appropriate members of his administration and other national leaders could mount a series of Climate Change Alerts, using a variety of media -- internet, television, film, radio, newspapers, social media -- in order to educate and arouse one of the most ignorant of all publics on the realities of climate change.
Amid the passionate discussion that these figures arouse, one comment by David McAuley, the trust's chief executive, deserves attention: "Reducing UK hunger will require a collective effort from the voluntary sector, government, the Department for Work and Pensions, businesses and the public.
I remember rushing down from Lincoln, where I was working, to see it and being bowled over by the genius of Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop production: its ability to captivate with its fluidity and grace, and to arouse one's anger at the attritional strategy of the military top brass.
Ms. Pardo has the most consistently developed role, and she makes the mother's manipulation of the young couple so menacing it is intolerable, but she can also arouse one's sympathy when it becomes clear she has been driven mad by a sorrow that she cannot acknowledge if she is to continue living.
It may aggravate an existing disease (urinary-tract infection, peptic ulcer, hepatitis, epilepsy) or arouse one lying latent (hepatitis, fatty liver, Hodgkin's disease), but, to the best of present medicinal knowledge, it is altogether lacking in creative pathogenic powers.
Similar(53)
Asian beggars, she observed, are "so repulsive that instead of appealing to one's sympathy they only succeed in arousing one's disgust".
Although much of Thomas Root's story has already been told, it is bizarre enough to have aroused one's interest in seeing and hearing the man himself.
He randomly gave a group of subjects either propranolol, a drug that blocks the effect of norepinephrine, or a placebo just before they heard one of two stories: an emotionally arousing one or a neutral one.
Many details of the retinoic acid pathway remain to be fleshed out, but scientists think that the vitamin derivative operates by entering a cell and somehow arousing one or more of its designated receptors.
Having asked a quartet of volunteers to write down four tasks they would like him to accomplish, Cox not only guesses what they are, but comes up with a prerecorded film in which he achieves them: that last touch instantly arouses one's suspicions.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com