exasperated 的定义
- feeling or expressing extreme annoyance or irritation:In the final moments of a wild debate, the exasperated moderator tried to regain control of the conversation.
exasperated 近义词
upset, provoke
更多exasperated例句
- Like most caretakers, we are overwhelmed and exasperated, and now sitting on a mountain of Legos that stab our feet every night.
- In the time since, the Tesla solar roof has run into technical issues and mounting costs in manufacturing and installation, leading to exasperated customers and even a lawsuit from Walmart, for fires allegedly caused by the solar panels.
- Around them, it’s easiest to witness the quicksilver changes in personae that O’Brien runs through — gawky freak, obnoxious boss, righteously exasperated bully — that allow him to find the best laughs in each moment.
- That is both an endorsement and an exasperated eye roll at its multiple endings, the last of which seem to tease some sort of Cruella & Flunkies crime supersquad franchise.
- The ad drew an immediate and overwhelmingly negative reaction for exasperated social media users, many who identify as LGBTQ, decrying the reality TV personality getting into politics.
- This year APEC seemed to stand for: Asian People Exasperated with China.
- Understandably, even Tea Leoni is a bit exasperated with all the questions about Clinton comparisons, shouting “Kissinger!”
- As I hasten to reassure these exasperated moms and dads, I had to be in the office anyway.
- Finally, an exasperated Eisenhower ordered the support necessary to help recover Paris.
- He may have been particularly exasperated because he had just been texting with his wife about dinner.
- This exasperated the students so that they began one of those demonstrations for which Paris is famous.
- Seymour, exasperated by finding that no party was inclined to support his pretensions, spoke with extravagant violence.
- Gila Bend had exasperated him because it was not the town it called itself, but a huddle of adobe huts.
- But who knows; he was perhaps more exasperated by ill fortune, delirium, or despair, than really bad at heart.
- At other places, exasperated at the chiefs of the episcopal party, the communiers were demolishing their fortified houses.