başvurmak: "He invoked his diplomatic immunity. - Diplomatik dokunulmazlığına başvurdu.", "He invoked Plato in defense of his thesis. - Tezini savunmak için Eflatun'a başvurdu."
To call on for aid or protection; to invite earnestly or solemnly; to summon; to address in prayer; to solicit or demand by invocation; to implore; as, to invoke the Supreme Being, or to invoke His and blessing
{f} requests help or protection (from a deity); summon a spirit through witchcraft; request, make an appeal; pray; activate a command, cause a certain action (Computers)
(v ) to call a subroutine by a CALL statement or by a defined assignment statement To call a function by a reference to it by name or operator during the evaluation of an expression
To ritually "call in" a spirit, entity or energy higher than that of the human form This is most commonly recognised through the ritual of Drawing Down the Moon The purpose can vary from wishing to contact a loved one who has passed over to drawing upon the wisdom and knowledge of the chosen Deity However, I would strongly advise against using this practise until you are entirely confident of being stable enough to handle such strong energies within your own body
If you invoke a law, you state that you are taking a particular action because that law allows or tells you to. The judge invoked an international law that protects refugees
evoke or call forth, with or as if by magic; "raise the specter of unemployment"; "he conjured wild birds in the air"; "stir a disturbance"; "call down the spirits from the mountain"
If something such as a piece of music invokes a feeling or an image, it causes someone to have the feeling or to see the image. Many people consider this use to be incorrect. The music invoked the wide open spaces of the prairies. = evoke
If you invoke something such as a principle, a saying, or a famous person, you refer to them in order to support your argument. He invoked memories of Britain's near-disastrous disarmament in the 1930s