antagonize 的 2 个定义
an·tag·o·nized, an·tag·o·niz·ing.
- to make hostile or unfriendly; make an enemy or antagonist of: His speech antagonized many voters.
- to act in opposition to; oppose.
an·tag·o·nized, an·tag·o·niz·ing.
- Rare. to act antagonistically.
antagonize 近义词
cause problem; oppose
antagonize 的近义词 12 个
antagonize 的反义词 7 个
更多antagonize例句
- Overcoming resistanceFor some unvaccinated Americans, the FDA approval is the latest in a series of actions and appeals that have fallen flat or further antagonized them.
- As I’ve written before, confronting people on social media—in Facebook posts, Twitter replies, Instagram comments—isn’t helpful and can antagonize others.
- You will do your friend no favors by antagonizing the mother of her grandchild.
- The film acknowledges this wrong, but never antagonizes the child.
- If you want this city to prosper, you shouldn’t be antagonizing him.
- Satirists occupy a perilous position—to skewer dogma and cant, and to antagonize the establishment while needing its protection.
- Close attachment to autocratic regimes by the West pays short-term dividends but will antagonize generations of Muslims.
- Going northward would antagonize Iraqi Sunnis, whom Washington and Baghdad are currently wooing.
- So far in the States, he has eschewed the roaring, pumping, and scolding so as not to antagonize his new teammates and opponents.
- Diplomatically, though, the big news is that Obama and Netanyahu will not antagonize each other.
- He could not indorse the religious ideas taught in them, and he was not there that day to antagonize them.
- It is not well to antagonize the priests, who hold us firmly to this law.
- When he was angered it was as though the offender had managed to antagonize some natural law, or force or mass.
- Don't antagonize him; we can't afford to fight this war on any more fronts than we are now.
- To brave public opinion and antagonize the Lower House of Congress required the largest courage.