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18 Sentences With "be exasperated"

How to use be exasperated in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "be exasperated" and check conjugation/comparative form for "be exasperated". Mastering all the usages of "be exasperated" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Theresa May, the Prime Minister, is reported to be exasperated.
Republicans claimed to be exasperated after weeks of negotiations over the measure.
She pretended to be exasperated, but this former horse girl was secretly thrilled.
America may be exasperated, but it will not force the Saudis to end the blockade.
The viewer may be exasperated by some of the seemingly poor decisions made by the characters.
In the video, posted on YouTube Monday, Khusyaynova appears to be exasperated and recites a prepared statement.
Mr. Xi is said to be exasperated with Kim Jong-un, a leader much his junior, whom he openly disparaged during his meetings in Florida in April with Mr. Trump, American officials say.
Scholars of Bell will be exasperated, but "Letters from Baghdad" is not for them; it is for viewers who may know nothing of her, and for whom the basic shape of her exploits will be astounding enough.
Proponents of a universal basic income, meanwhile, especially those who see it as insurance for a time when robots drive us all out of work, will be exasperated at the way the plan explicitly excludes the jobless and the neediest.
"These worries are understandable and they can be exasperated if the current administration moves to cut back on the student loan forgiveness program and any other federal support, including Pell grants and subsidized loans for low-income students," Franek said.
"These worries are understandable and they can be exasperated if the current administration moves to cut back on the student loan forgiveness program and any other federal support including Pell grants and subsidized loans for low-income students," said Robert Franek, The Princeton Review's editor-in-chief.
Juncker, who has set a balanced trade deal with the United States as a priority, is said to be exasperated that some of the EU leaders who approved the initial negotiating mandate in 2013 have become increasingly critical of the talks on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP).
While some may be exasperated by the inconsistency with which major arts organizations responded to the challenges of enacting diversity even to the present day, when we see African-American art(s) in the institutions around us, we can often trace such programming back to a 1968 moment.
By the conclusion of the film, Izaiah is off to Spain seemingly to get away from it all, while Franklin appears to be exasperated by both the filming and his mother's status as a pariah, and just wants an end to the circus that has become part of their lives.
Carl is often there to back Steve up and help him out in times of distress. Although he continues to be exasperated and irritated by his antics, over the progression of the show, Carl develops a fondness for Steve that surprises even himself. Carl is an officer for the Chicago Police Department. He takes his job seriously and it is often suggested that he is very good at what he does, despite having an incompetent if genial boss in Lt. Murtaugh.
He also proved that the so-called massacres as described in Njegoš's The Mountain Wreath and in the Montenegrin histories of that period, had never taken place. He knew that Njegoš used poetic license to create a drama in which he could get his ideas across. Ruvarac was right only in that he denounced such speculation as being unauthenticated and therefore unhistorical, as indeed they were. Ruvarac had good reason sometimes to be exasperated by the inaccuracies and fabrications of histories because they were written by foreigners who perpetuated all kinds of stories and myths without researching Venetian archives.
The cost of reproduction hypothesis posits that reproduction (and increased reproductive effort) is costly in terms of future survival and reproduction. These costs may be exasperated in certain organisms, such as first time breeders. Along with the idea that organisms are selected to maximize lifetime reproductive success, this hypothesis results in a trade-off between current reproduction and future fitness that is pivotal in life history theory. This trade-off can be analyzed on three levels: the genetic (which analyzes the genetic basis of covariation between traits), the phenotypic (which assess how traits directly connected to fitness covary), and the intermediate level (which involves the analysis of the mechanisms connecting the genetic and phenotypic levels, like physiological mechanisms).
Neil has an attractive older sister, Katie, whom the boys stare at when visiting Neil's; however, he usually does not get angry or offended by the attention like Will does about his mother Polly, more likely because he is oblivious and laid-back. His father is often shown to be exasperated by Neil's ignorance and constantly says in an unimpressed tone "Neil!". Recurring jokes are that despite his lack of intelligence, Neil tends to be right about meaningless facts and that he sometimes gets with girls whom Will is pursuing. Neil sometimes hooks up with much older, unattractive women – he is shown to be surprised when he thinks Karen is pregnant because she told him that she could not have any more children.

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