Agitant
The word "discuss" comes from the Latin word "discutere" meaning "to dash to pieces, agitate"
The word exasperate comes from the Latin word exasperatus. It first appeared in the 1530s. Some synonyms for exasperate are infuriate, agitate, and exacerbate.
Agitate is like when you get mad, so you could say : The kid says I agitate him.
The word agitated is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb agitate.
Bother, annoy, and disturb are words. Those mean agitate.
He/she/it does/acts/drives.
The city was peaceful during the day, but demonstrators continued to agitate publicly throughout the night.
Annoy or agitate
Excite, agitate, make vehement...
Opposite Word of to relax: "agitate, excite, tense, worry"
The word "stir" can be used to replace "agitate" in the sentence. So it would read: "Jonathan began to stir the fish tank." This maintains the original meaning while using a simpler term.
He/she/it does.