exasperate in English

verb
1
irritate intensely; infuriate.
this futile process exasperates prison officials
synonyms:infuriateincenseangerannoyirritatemaddenenrageantagonizeprovokeirkvexget on someone's nervesruffle someone's feathersrub the wrong wayaggravaterilebugneedleget someone's back upget someone's goattee offtick off

Use "exasperate" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "exasperate" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "exasperate", or refer to the context using the word "exasperate" in the English Dictionary.

1. He shouted in an exasperate voice.

2. He had begun to exasperate her at last.

3. What does Aggravate mean? To annoy or exasperate

4. R: young man, do not exasperate a man who neglects the dead!

5. Again and again passages in his essays exasperate or bewilder.

6. It'showed the trend with the exasperate terms of trade of the developing country.

7. He had had no expectation of doing more than exasperate, and supply a distraction.

8. I have stomach ulcer, often drink coffee can make an illness exasperate?

9. Puns exasperate after a while , tall tales a certain sameness, misspelling a strain to read.

10. Fathers, do not exasperate your children, so that they will not lose heart.

11. 10 It'showed the trend with the exasperate terms of trade of the developing country.

12. Synonyms for Aggravate include annoy, irritate, exasperate, irk, nettle, vex, peeve, pique, provoke and rile

13. Antonyms for Alleviate include exacerbate, aggravate, agitate, heighten, compound, intensify, provoke, exasperate, increase and amplify

14. This only seemed to exasperate the situation and it was some time before order was restored.

15. Yes, their Coquettishness and evasions can exasperate men looking for an unequivocal answer to riddles of life and love

16. Fathers , do not exasperate your children; instead, bring them the training and instruction of the Lord.

17. Puns exasperate after a while , tall tales a certain sameness[Sentencedict.com], misspelling a strain to read.

18. 29 Puns exasperate after a while , tall tales a certain sameness, misspelling a strain to read.

19. Acerbate (third-person singular simple present Acerbates, present participle acerbating, simple past and past participle acerbated) (transitive) To exasperate; to irritate

20. Aggravate in the sense ‘annoy or exasperate’ dates back to the 17th century and has been so used by respected writers ever since

21. Aggravate in the sense ‘annoy or exasperate’ dates back to the 17th century and has been so used by respected writers ever since

22. Cheapen: 1 v lower the grade of something; reduce its worth Synonyms: degrade Types: devaluate , devalue remove the value from; deprive of its value demonetise , demonetize deprive of value for payment Type of: aggravate , exacerbate , exasperate , worsen make worse

23. ‘Yes, their Coquettery and evasions can exasperate men looking for an unequivocal answer to riddles of life and love.’ ‘As with all personal questions, I tried to avoid answering, but she took my evasions to be an affirmative response.’

24. Praise “Affective Turn does a better job of introducing readers to the central issues surrounding the study of affect in the humanities and social sciences than any single work.” — Jeff Pruchnic, Criticism “The Affective Turn, to its credit, refuses any generic disciplinary location.It will inspire and exasperate readers across the humanities and social sciences.

25. Usage: The two most common senses of the verb aggravate are “to make worse” and “to annoy, exasperate.” Both senses, and the corresponding senses of the noun Aggravation, appeared in the early 17th century at almost the same time and have been standard since then.The noun and verb senses “to annoy” and “annoyance” are sometimes objected to, and used somewhat less frequently