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invoked

Invoked is the past participle of invoke. In general usage, invoke means to call upon something for assistance or support, to appeal to a principle or authority as justification, or to cause a mechanism, process, or function to operate. When something is invoked, it is activated or brought into effect.

In religious and spiritual contexts, to invoke typically means to call upon a deity, spirit, or sacred

In law and policy, invoking a right, clause, or remedy means exercising or triggering it. Examples include

In computing and technology, invocation refers to the act of requesting the execution of a function, method,

Etymology and usage notes: invoke derives from Latin invocare, from in- “upon” + vocare “to call.” The

presence,
often
through
prayer,
ritual,
or
incantation.
The
term
can
also
be
used
more
broadly
to
mean
recalling
or
appealing
to
a
presence
or
source
of
power
or
guidance.
invoking
the
right
to
silence,
invoking
emergency
powers,
or
invoking
a
contractual
clause
as
a
basis
for
action.
procedure,
or
service.
Software
systems
may
support
direct
invocation
of
APIs
or
remote
services,
and
programming
languages
distinguish
between
calling
(invoking)
a
function
and
other
forms
of
execution.
The
noun
“invocation”
is
often
used
to
describe
the
actual
call
or
the
process
of
calling
a
procedure.
term
is
widely
used
across
disciplines
to
denote
summoning,
activating,
or
appealing
to
support,
authority,
or
function.