It means to be irritable or contrary; cantankerous.Crotchety means to be irritable and grumpily.
It's IRRITABLE. It means grouchy. Here are some sentences.The irritable old fellow corrected my spelling.He can be really irritable first thing in the morning.Don't be irritable just because I'm late.
Arsey...means aggressive or irritable
Well, hyper-irritable means extreme irritability, so I used this: "That boy over there is hyper-irritable, so try not to pester him."
The root word of "grumpy" is "grump," which means to be irritable or in a bad mood.
Irritable is the correct spelling.
Choler means irritable temper. Humour means mood. Sith means since or because Yore means ago or time ago. So if you string the sentence together I think it is: She seems in an irritable temper. Her mood has been like this since many days ago
He was incredibly irritable this morning, snapping at everyone over the slightest things.
Crabbit isn't a proper English word - it's part of the Dialect of Scotland, and means grumpy, irritable and so on - normally used about old people, in the same way as the English would use Cantankerous.
The idiom 'out of sorts' means that you are feeling irritable. "Sorts" are what typographers call those little blocks of type with one letter on each one. If you are "out of sorts" then you have run out of that letter -- you can imagine how that would make a typographer irritable!
The word irritable works. There are quite a few synomyms.
Irritable Hedgehog Music was created in 2010.