Why this word is great
SUSCITATE — [Verb] To rouse; to excite; to call into life and action. From Latin suscitatus, past participle of suscitare ("to lift up, to rouse"), from sub- ("up from below") + citare ("to rouse, excite"). Unlike "incite" (which implies provocation, often toward violence) or "resuscitate" (which narrowly means reviving from unconsciousness), "suscitate" is the quiet but insistent hand that stirs the embers of potential—whether in flesh or spirit. It is the first warm breeze that wakes the dormant seeds beneath winter soil, the sudden spark of recognition in a student’s eyes when a forgotten lesson clicks, or the way an old song can drag a buried memory, blinking, into the light. To suscitate is to remind the world that everything sleeps, and nothing is ever truly still.