EXASPERATE vs INFURIATE: ADJECTIVE
- Exasperated; imbittered.
- Enraged; raging; furiously angry; infuriated.
- Furious.
EXASPERATE vs INFURIATE: VERB
- Make worse
- Make furious
- To frustrate, vex, provoke, or annoy; to make angry.
- Exasperate or irritate
- Make furious
- To make furious or mad with anger; to enrage
EXASPERATE vs INFURIATE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To increase the gravity or intensity of.
- To make grievous, or more grievous or malignant; to aggravate; to imbitter.
- To make very angry or impatient; annoy greatly.
- To irritate in a high degree; to provoke; to enrage; to excite or to inflame the anger of.
- To make furious; enrage.
- To render furious; to enrage; to exasperate.
EXASPERATE vs INFURIATE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Irritated; inflamed.
- In botany, rough; covered with hard, projecting points.
- To irritate to a high degree; make very angry; provoke to rage; enrage: as, to exasperate an opponent.
- To incite by means of irritation; stimulate through anger or rage; stir up.
- To make grievous or more grievous; aggravate; embitter: as, to exasperate enmity.
- To augment the intensity of; exacerbate: as, to exasperate inflammation or a part inflamed.
- Synonyms Provoke, Incense, Exasperate, Irritate; vex, chafe, nettle, sting. The first four words all refer to the production of angry and generally demonstrative feeling. Irritate often has to do with the nerves, but all have to do with the mind. Provoke is perhaps the most sudden; exasperate is the strongest and least self-controlled; incense stands second in these respects.
- To increase in severity.
- Enraged; raging; mad: as, an infuriate lunatic.
- To render furious or mad; enrage; make raging.
EXASPERATE vs INFURIATE: RELATED WORDS
- Bemuse, Enrage, Annoy, Irk, Bewilder, Perplex, Frustrate, Irritate, Vex, Incense, Outrage, Worsen, Exacerbate, Aggravate, Infuriate
- N/A
EXASPERATE vs INFURIATE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Bemuse, Enrage, Annoy, Irk, Bewilder, Perplex, Frustrate, Irritate, Vex, Incense, Outrage, Worsen, Exacerbate, Aggravate, Infuriate
- N/A
EXASPERATE vs INFURIATE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- It just means that much of the new share holders are weak hands and could exasperate a selloff.
- That was a course which in his opinion would be the most likely of all to exasperate.
- And then she spat at him to exasperate him more.
- The ible is challenging us as parents to not provoke, exasperate, scold and nag our children.
- Unrepresented dealing with the bar can contribute to or exasperate numerous errors.
- Fathers, do not exasperate your children, for fear they may grow disheartened.
- Exasperate gives the impression of being harsh and causing discouragement.
- SYN: Inflame, irritate, provoke, sting, nettle, exasperate, chafe, gall.
- Slaves could bargain, outwit, and exasperate their masters.
- Exasperate, provoke, wound, make worse, intensify, embitter, heighten.
- Bluegreen anything one way or the other, so why confuse and infuriate owners?
- Claire asks in the present, continuing to infuriate misogynistic villains decades later.
- Parents may infuriate and alienate their children by imposing unrealistic expectations.
- Neither do you want to infuriate people by explaining everything needlessly.
- Scott Hambrick returns to infuriate probably about half the audience.
- Why infuriate any risk to the Retin -A question.
- The argument appeared to infuriate case prosecutor Robert Swann.
- But New York weather never fails to infuriate.
- The latter will infuriate even some Western environmentalists.
- They are patronizing and only infuriate people more!
EXASPERATE vs INFURIATE: QUESTIONS
- How many answers did the crossword solver find to the exasperate?
- What is the most likely answer to the exasperate puzzle?
- What does I am firm and your words will only exasperate mean?
- What are the medicinal properties of Ficus exasperate?
- Do the habits of good writers infuriate poor writers and non-writers?
- What two comments specifically infuriate Jem to the point that he can't control?
- What does infuriate as one who has always used public transport?