Both are correct. Irate means angry. Irritate means annoy.
The correct term is "irritate." It means to annoy or provoke someone. "Irate" is an adjective that describes someone who is extremely angry.
No, "irated" is not a word in standard English. The past tense of "irate" is "irated." The correct past tense form of "irate" is "was irate" or "became irate."
The irate customer demanded a full refund after receiving a damaged product.
Her constant tapping on the desk was starting to irritate me.
The English word "irate" has a Latin root "iratus," meaning angry or enraged.
Dispute is the correct spelling.Dispute is the correct spelling.Dispute is the correct spelling.Dispute is the correct spelling.Dispute is the correct spelling.Dispute is the correct spelling.Dispute is the correct spelling.Dispute is the correct spelling.Dispute is the correct spelling.Dispute is the correct spelling.Dispute is the correct spelling.
That is the correct spelling of the adjective "irate" (angry, mad, upset).
The correct spelling is irritate.
Irritate Irate Irrational Irrigate Irrevocable Irretrievable Irregular Irresistible
No. If you put the word in a simple sentence you can see it is not a verb eg The dog irates the cat. = not correct so it is not a verb. The dog irritates the cat. = correct. I am irate. = a correct sentence. Irate is an adjective. The "verb of irate" is "generate ire" or "cause ire" or "bring about ire".
No, 'irate' is an adjective, a word to describe a noun: an irate driver.Irateness is the noun form.
you say it like it sounds. i/rate=irate
Synonyms for irate include angry, mad, furious...
Irate is an adjective.
The cast of Irate Gamer Neo - 2007 includes: Chris Bores as The Irate Gamer
It is: pirate - p = irate
Seeing drivers using their cell phones while driving makes me irate. The irate housekeeper threaten to punish the mischievous children for their antics. The boss becomes very irate when my reports are late.
irate gamer is a genius not as great as avgn but still great