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"exasperate" Definitions
  1. exasperate somebody to annoy somebody very much

75 Sentences With "exasperate"

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

The prejudices of locals exasperate many of the Yemenis here.
The baseless claim, which Obama's team denied, was said to irk and exasperate the former President.
Such offbeat choices can exasperate concert promoters, but Rousset refuses to limit himself to brand-name masters.
The fact that China used to operate a satellite tracking station in Kiribati will further exasperate those concerns.
Having Mr Trump sit and listen as other leaders drone on would seem the perfect way to exasperate him.
Mr. Bolton's remarks could further exasperate the Europeans, who expressed disappointment when Mr. Trump abandoned the deal last week.
A cascade of petty crimes and periodic crimes of sexual violence against islanders, exasperate locals and stoke anti-base sentiments.
Off to Ohio Claire goes to meet with the families affected, help how she can, and generally exasperate the Shepherds.
Then why do these Cubanos plan to vote for Trump, other than to exasperate their politically correct Gen-X offspring?
But a golf hazard can come in many forms as long as it lurks to unnerve and exasperate an inattentive golfer.
Mr Samore thinks Mr Kim's behaviour may eventually exasperate China so much that it will bring into play sanctions which really hurt.
In John Mulaney & The Sack Lunch Bunch, Mulaney blends spectacular comedy with Mister Rogers-esque styling to delight and exasperate all ages.
It could be a late night in the City of London and thin trade from other regions of the world could exasperate matters.
And since this was now my job, I also found myself touring a lot more, which only served to exasperate the anxiety attacks.
The impending shutdown will only exasperate that struggle to pay the bills, hitting right at the heart of what storefronts need most: people.
The word is inspiration, and it tends to exasperate, annoy and frustrate many of the athletes to whom it is so regularly applied.
That would risk a fresh crisis in the currency area, exasperate Germany and kill off any lingering French hopes of significant euro-zone reform.
Advertisements, which are specifically tailored to align with what Facebook perceives to be your likes, demographics and beliefs, only serve to exasperate this problem.
"I don't want to satisfy my desire, I want to exasperate it," a character says in "Unguided Tour," which appeared in this magazine in 1977.
Together, they go through all the usual rom-com motions: they meet cute, exasperate each other, and express it all with mutual needling and snappy banter.
Madison Hemings said that his mother "implicitly relied" on Jefferson's promises, a statement that troubled me when I first wrote about Hemings — subjects often exasperate biographers.
His remarks could further exasperate European leaders as they decide whether to challenge Mr. Trump's reimposition of sanctions or assist in negotiating a new deal with Iran.
This move completely ignored the complaints patients and doctors had had about the previous system and replaced it with a system that seemed to further exasperate the situation.
But a lot of startups make products that will only be available to people who can afford to spend, and that could actually exasperate divides in our society.
They have a lot of dollar-denominated debt in China, and so as not to exasperate the expectations too much on the currency because that would lead to outflows.
TOKYO (Reuters) - Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda on Monday warned that the growing presence of high-frequency trading (HFT) could exasperate price moves and hurt financial market stability.
Nearly a decade after the financial crisis, it underscored how the debate about banks being "too big to fail" continues to rage in Washington and exasperate on Wall Street.
Darlene's daughter Harris (Emma Kenney), in particular, was little more than a loose collection of bratty-teen clichés who existed mainly to exasperate her mother and make Roseanne seem superior.
Mr. Trump's penchant for picking fights is well established by now, but it continues to confound and exasperate foreign leaders who are not accustomed to such rough-and-tumble interactions with American presidents.
The notion of the YouTube audience as the children of divorce — a dependent, personally involved group whose feelings must be taken into account — may exasperate some people, but Ms. Ballinger doesn't see it that way.
"I used to visit every applicant," Mr. Bennett said, adding that while he no longer does, he still manages to exasperate his walking companions by stopping to exclaim over cornices he somehow has never noticed before.
West Palm Beach, Florida (CNN)Minutes before President Donald Trump departed the White House on Friday for his languid Florida hideaway, he appeared to exasperate aides who had hoped he might avoid holding court with the press.
Foam can trap and exasperate body heat so it's not great for people who sleep hot, but with the two covers, it can be much more comfortable, Terry Crall, a registered nurse and certified sleep educator, tells Insider Picks.
"Without consumers' buy-in, any intermediate programs established to provide new job training or education will go ignored and exasperate the potential chasm that will open between those who lose their jobs to automation and those who don't," the report says.
As the lingering questions about the yearbook have become fodder for conservative outlets — including Breitbart News, where the executive chairman, Stephen K. Bannon, is a vocal supporter of Mr. Moore — they have also begun to exasperate some supporters of Mr. Jones.
Meanwhile the CSU is driven by antipathy towards the chancellor and her leadership style (which seems utterly to exasperate Mr Seehofer, Mr Söder and Mr Dobrindt) and blind panic about the rise of the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany, which is eating into the party's Bavarian support.
As Lena recounts what happened to her, she repeats sentiments that are blockbuster taboos — that she doesn't know, that she can't explain the Shimmer or what it was after — statements that are bound to exasperate the Lomaxes in the audiences as much as the Lomax in the movie.
For "Solo," he has teamed up with his son Jonathan, and one thing I liked about the result—and also, I suspect, the thing that will exasperate the more pious fans of the franchise—is how often it feels nudged by the spirit not of "Star Wars" but of Indiana Jones.
"  Pelosi appeared to exasperate Trump when she mentioned the Democrats' 40 pickups in the House and said a partial government shutdown would be a "Trump shutdown," to which Trump responded by listing Republican gains in the Senate and claiming that "Nancy's in a situation where it's not easy for her to talk right now," referring to her speakership bid. "Mr.
Nunez would occasionally exasperate them, too, with a fielding miscue or a base-running gaffe, but he was also the guy who could be relied upon to be a good sport when his teammates teased him, as Derek Jeter did a couple of seasons ago in Toronto by drawing a chalk outline of Nunez's body at the spot in the infield where he fell, in exaggerated fashion, after straining a hamstring.
A group of women who have been working since 2014 to identify Twitter disinformation campaigns and trolls blackfishing — or fraudulently posing as black on the platform — say the ADOS hashtag has become a prime target for bad actors to hijack to spread criticism and disinformation about candidates in the same way that Russian trolls in 203 posed as black Americans to exasperate real concerns about Hillary Clinton's record and to astroturf existing social movements like Black Lives Matter.
This might tend to barbarize, demoralize, and exasperate the whole mass and produce most deplorable consequences.
Access to user data by third parties such as Cambridge Analytica can exasperate and amplify existing filter bubbles users have created, artificially increasing existing biases and further divide societies.
An unhappy woman falls for a man far above her station in life. To further exasperate her torment, she learns that her own father is the stepfather of the man she desires.
21 February 1892. though "the number of chances that Morris literally threw away by rash and reckless play in front of goal was enough to exasperate the best-tempered supporter of the home club."Notes on Sport.
She is often surprised by Amir's carefree and spontaneous personality. She patiently explains to Amir when their tribal customs differ. Her three sons often exasperate her with their rowdiness, but she loves them all the same. ; :Karluk's brother-in-law.
I'm constantly upset, hurt. Beings and things that I endured perfectly before, now make me nervous and exasperate me to a point that I came to believe myself seriously sick with nerves. The effort that I do to improve myself exhausts me, and I end up shutting myself up with books and memories. Anyway, I'm not worth much lately.
Prior to his execution, Custine met with the Abbe Lotheringen, for his confession and his prayers. He also wrote a letter to his son. Upon arrival in Paris, Custine displayed his usual sang froid, which seemed to exasperate his political enemies. He took private rooms in a furnished hotel, and rented a room for his secretary.
The woman, uncaring, intimates with violence her husband to look for a way out of traffic. She manages to exasperate the man who, after a crash with a car, holds the wrench and injures the driver. The woman then, hypocrite, accuses him of violence. In the fourth Totò and Ninetto are puppets specially created to give life to the show "Othello" by Shakespeare.
Red Rose Speedway received a mixed response from contemporary music critics,Rodriguez, p. 137. many of whom dismissed its songs as mediocre. According to author and critic Bob Woffinden, writing in 1981, the album was an example of McCartney "continu[ing] to exasperate his audience" before he and Wings finally won respect with the late 1973 release of Band on the Run.Woffinden, pp. 66–67, 81.
While waiting for the other bishops to arrive, they engaged in informal discussions characterized as tending to "exasperate rather than heal their differences". The metropolitan of Ephesus, Memnon, was already present with his 52 bishops. Nestorius and his 16 bishops were the first to arrive shortly after Easter. As archbishop of the imperial city of Constantinople, he traveled with a detachment of troops who were under the command of Count Candidian.
The Russian commander-in-chief Alexander Tormasov retaliated by ordering General Simonovich to incarcerate Mariam, her sister Maria, wife of Prince Davit Mikeladze, and Solomon's sister Mariam, wife of Prince Malkhaz Andronikashvili, at the fortress of Poti. The arrested noblewomen were to receive food from their own estates; giving money to them was prohibited. Simonovich advised caution, warning that harsh treatment of the female dignitaries would exasperate the Imeretians.
South Bihar is also home to a number of small, fast-flowing tributary rivers that swell during rains and exasperate flooding.Koul, D. N., Singh, S., Neelam, G., & Shukla, G. (2012). Traditional water management systems-An overview of Ahar-pyne system in South Bihar plains of India and need for its revival. To adapt to the region's unpredictable weather, Bihari farmers developed a system of agriculture known as ahar-pynes.
Eclipse : A powerful and ancient high ranking demon whose occupation consists of serving those of the Raenef name. It is revealed that his services are highly sought after by many demon lords. He is charged with finding the newest Lord Raenef (Raenef V) and educating him. Though the newest demon lord never ceases to annoy and exasperate him, he comes to care very deeply for the innocent boy.
Despite appearing to be loyal to Captain Crozier, he has secretly fallen in with Hickey's band. He conducts an elaborate, and rather humorous, subterfuge to lure Crozier and Dr Goodsir to the Hickey ambush site (his attempts to pronounce the word polynya: polyp and polyanna, exasperate Captain Crozier). Golding eventually dies along with the rest of Hickey's compatriots. ;Lady Silence (Silna) :A young Inuit woman who has a mysterious link to the Tuunbaq.
Tsarist administration tried to justify its actions arguing that Kumyk rulers ask Russian merchants to pay fees when they pass through their lands. Moreover, this money was used to pay taxes. For example, in the 60s of the 18th century a Kizlyar merchant Melkum Davydov was a tax-farmer in Kostek and paid 70 rubles. However, not eager to exasperate Kumyk rulers the Kizlyar customs often did not force local residents to pay customs.
Ambit magazine was described by artist Ralph Steadman as "a surreptitious peek inside a private world. Without it such vital sparks of inspiration could well be lost forever.". The magazine professes not to include in its publication criticisms, essays, articles and lengthy reviews but prefers including real work, the likes and dislikes associated with the readers, creating never a dull moment and always sparking off feedbacks. To quote Carol Ann Duffy, "Ambit continues to surprise, exasperate and delight".
It > will not treat of politics, nor tend to exasperate their minds by harsh > language upon any subject. There is a more excellent way to show that we are > not indeed 'Barbarians', and the Editor prefers the method of exhibiting > facts, to convince the Chinese that they still have very much to learn. > Aware also, of the relation in which foreigners stand to the native > authorities, the Editor has endeavoured to conciliate their friendship, and > hopes ultimately to prove successful.Britton 1933, p.
Cold, cruel, uncompromising, thoughtless, she keeps the theater company waiting for hours, and then proceeds to break the heart of the playwright, humiliate her fellow players, and exasperate her manager beyond all endurance. In the company is Gloria Cromwell (Nazimova), the antithesis of Jane Goring. She tells the star her pleasure in being in her company. Eventually the play opens, and after the final curtain the audience shouts for Gloria Cromwell, Jane is obliged to relinquish the stage to her.
" In another letter, she said, "The beings that I love the most have died or are absent and I see this strange fact: I live increasingly away from the beings that surround me, and I take refuge in memories, in the past. I can not find a place in reality. I'm constantly upset, hurt. Beings and things that I endured perfectly before, now make me nervous and exasperate me to a point that I came to believe myself seriously sick with nerves.
Joseph Conrad described Limerick in a 1917 letter as having "a quality which gets home every time and if she may exasperate her audience I am certain she will never bore it or leave it indifferent."Joseph Conrad to B. Macdonald Hastings (19 March 1917), in The Collected Letters of Joseph Conrad (Cambridge University Press 1983): 47. Limerick and Ben Iden Payne left the Manchester troupe in 1911, and toured the United States in 1913.Who's who in the Theatre (Pitman 1922): 638.
' About > this time Alice James remarked acidly that Elly's flustered carryings - on > about her engagement were likely to exasperate her fiancé beyond endurance. > In 1913, Henry, writing to his acolyte Howard Sturgis about the relatives he > had mentioned in his memoir A Small Boy and Others, explained enigmatically, > 'Yes, my Father's two other sisters were my Van Buren and my Temple aunts. I > should have liked to drag in the former's daughter, the intimate of our > childhood, or of mine, later Mrs. Stuyvesant Morris, but forebore.
At a press conference for the 1982 album Hot Space, reporters exasperate Freddie with questions about his personal life and sexuality. Freddie's relationship with the band sours further after the music video for "I Want to Break Free" backfires and he signs a $4 million solo deal with CBS Records. He records his 1984 album Mr. Bad Guy in Munich, engages in drugs and gay orgies with Paul, and starts to realize he's unwell. Mary, now married and pregnant, visits unexpectedly and urges Freddie to return to Queen and participate in Live Aid.
In a "gracious" reply to Lloyd George's first speech in the House of Commons as Prime Minister on 19 December 1916, Asquith made clear that he did not see his role "in any sense to be the leader of what is called an opposition". From around the spring of 1917 Asquith's reluctance to criticise the government at all began to exasperate some of his press supporters. Outside of the Commons, Margot and he returned to 20 Cavendish Square and he divided his life between there, The Wharf and visiting. Money, in the absence of his premier's salary, became more of a concern.
Since current vehicles require human actions to some extent, the driving school industry will not be disrupted until the majority of autonomous transportation is switched to the emerged dominant design. It is plausible that in the distant future driving a vehicle will be considered as a luxury, which implies that the structure of the industry is based on new entrants and a new market. Self-driving cars would also exasperate existing mobility inequalities driven by the interests of car companies and technology companies while taking investment away from more equitable and sustainable mobility initiatives such as public transportation.
Guests are then maneuvered into staying so they can be put through an evaluation process at the end of which the children decide whether or not the candidates fit their idea of good parents. Those who do not cut muster are free to go, so says the oldest sibling and his word has never been doubted amongst the rest of the family. The new candidates for parenthood put up determined resistance and begin to exasperate the quietly tyrannical older child; but affection for the new couple and maturation are making the other children wonder about their method of choosing parental guidance and just where "all the kind strangers" are going when they leave.
Lightnin’ was a comedy that Bacon had worked on for a number of years before its final incarnation debuted at the Gaiety Theatre on August 26, 1918. The play, originally titled A House Divided, is about Lightnin’ Bill Jones, a "lovable old liar" not known for his swiftness of foot. In 2007, Ethan Mordden described the character: "the uneducated rustic, innocent of fancy fashion, who somehow gets the better of popinjays and rogues... as slow as paste [with a] low-key yet fierce sense of independence... Lightnin' has wife troubles, money troubles, and to every question a set of deadpan retorts that exasperate all those in the vicinity."Mordden, Ethan, All That Glitters, St, Martin's Press, 2007, pg.
Dennis Oppenheim (September 6, 1938 – January 21, 2011) was an American conceptual artist, performance artist, earth artist, sculptor and photographer. Dennis Oppenheim's early artistic practice is an epistemological questioning about the nature of art, the making of art and the definition of art: a meta-art that arose when strategies of the Minimalists were expanded to focus on site and context. As well as an aesthetic agenda, the work progressed from perceptions of the physical properties of the gallery to the social and political context, largely taking the form of permanent public sculpture in the last two decades of a highly prolific career, whose diversity could exasperate his critics.Simon Taylor, Dennis Oppenheim, New Works, Guild Hall Museum, East Hampton, NY: 2001.
Although her friends' antics exasperate her, such as scheduling practices in her basement without her permission, she is dedicated to Poppin'Party, including leading the band in creating a music video and increasing their performances to gain traction in the BanG Dream! Girls Band Challenge. However, her isolated nature also clashes at times with the group; when her grades start to drop shortly before a live performance, she proclaims to her teacher that she would be able to record a high score on her exams and perform on the same day, but the pressure and her unwillingness to reveal her conversation with the teacher causes her to lash out at Rimi. Although wrought by guilt, she brings herself to confide in them her goals and they make amends.
In "The Dog and the Vial", a man offers his dog a vial of fancy perfume to smell and the dog reacts in horror, instead wishing to sniff more seemingly unappealing smells, specifically excrement. The poem concludes with the frustration of the speaker with his dog, expressed as the speaker states: "In this respect you, unworthy companion of my sad life, resemble the public, to whom one must never present the delicate scents that only exasperate them, but instead give them only dung, chosen with care". One can extrapolate this poem to apply more figuratively to the larger themes of the poet-reader relationship, in which Baudelaire deprecates his readers, viewing them as unintelligent and incapable of appreciating his work.
He made his debut for Southampton at home to Nottingham Forest on 13 December 1969, where he took the place of long-time club servant, John Sydenham, on the left-wing. At his best, Jenkins was a high-class winger with great speed, dazzling trickery and the ability to beat several defenders in one run, but would exasperate his fans by dribbling himself into trouble rather than release the ball to a teammate. He was never a prolific goal-scorer, but one memorable moment came on 31 August 1970 at Upton Park, where his run took him past four West Ham players before shooting past Hammers' goalkeeper Peter Grotier. He never realised his full potential at Southampton and was sold to Swindon Town in November 1972, having made a total of 96 appearances for Southampton, scoring six goals.
Mutant ataxin-1 also known to alter the neural circuitry of the developing cerebellum, which may lead to later vulnerability of Purkinje cells and suggests the existence of non-cell autonomous toxicity. The various interactions of ataxin 1 lead to many possible factors that can exasperate or moderate toxicity of its mutant form. Wild type ataxin 1 is quickly degraded in the cytoplasm, but can be stabilized by phosphorylation and 14-3-3 binding as needed by the cell. SCA1 positive mice haplodeficient in 14-3-3ε+/- were shown not to exhibit cerebellar degeneration but still exhibited lethal bulbar degeneration, suggesting that cerebellar atrophy may be related to increased stability of the expanded ataxin 1 protein and that there may be different pathogenic mechanisms for different regions of the brain. The site of phosphorylation is the serine at the 776th residue in ataxin 1.
As the Hohensteins allowed some robber barons to use the castle as a hideout, and their behaviour began to exasperate the neighbouring rulers, in 1454 it was occupied by Elector Palatine Frederick I and in 1462 was set ablaze by the unified forces of the cities of Colmar, Strasbourg, and Basel. In 1479, the Habsburg emperor Frederick III granted the castle ruins in fief to the Counts of Thierstein, who rebuilt them with a defensive system suited to the new artillery of the time. When in 1517 the last Thierstein died, the castle became a reverted fief and again came into the possession of the Habsburg emperor of the day, Maximilian I. In 1633, during the Thirty Years' War in which Catholics forces fought Protestants, the Imperial castle was besieged by Protestant Swedish forces. After a 52-day siege, the castle was burned and looted by the Swedish troops.
We further recommend the most clear and explicit assertion and vindication of our rights and liberties to be entered on the public records, that the world may know, in the present and all future generations, that we have a clear knowledge and a just sense of them, and, with submission to Divine Providence, that we never can be slaves. Nor can we think it advisable to agree to any steps for the protection of stamped papers or stamp-officers. Good and wholesome laws we have already for the preservation of the peace; and we apprehend there is no further danger of tumult and disorder, to which we have a well-grounded aversion; and that any extraordinary and expensive exertions would tend to exasperate the people and endanger the public tranquillity, rather than the contrary. Indeed, we cannot too often inculcate upon you our desires, that all extraordinary grants and expensive measures may, upon all occasions, as much as possible, be avoided.
Those married must be and will be sacred to each other, even more than what they are to each self. :::The man, whose main sexual attributes are courage and strength, must give and shall always give the woman protection, food, and direction, treating her always as the most delicate, sensible, and finest part of himself, and with magnanimity and generous benevolence that a strong being owes the weak, essentially when this weak delivers to himself, and also when Society has entrusted him. :::The woman, whose main attributes are self denial, beauty, compassion, shrewdness and tenderness, must give and shall always give the husband obedience, pleasantness, assistance, comfort, and advice; treating him always with the veneration owed to the person supporting and defending us, and with the delicacy of whom doesn’t want to exasperate the abrupt, irritable and harsh part of him, which is of his nature. :::One to another are owed and shall always give respect, deference, fidelity, trust, and tenderness; both will take care of what they were expecting from each other by joining together, and that this will not be contradicted by this union.

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