No, this quote is often misattributed to Wilde. He did say, "Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much," but the original saying is by Oscar Levant.
you are so right. people who are horrible want to be surrounded by horrible people, or at least people who have the potential to be horrible. forgiveness, and morals, are not ok with them,as a matter of fact, they hate and envy those kinds of folks.when you forgive and move on, you winAnswer:It not only annoys your enemies to forgive, but your allies as well. There can be nothing ore annoying than being forgiven for crimes one has not asked forgiveness for. When one asks for your forgiveness, whether it be your friends and loved ones or your enemies, then grant them that forgiveness. In the meantime, show them compassion as silently as you can and that will annoy your enemies just as much as granting them forgiveness when it was not asked but it will not annoy your allies to show them compassion. Particularly if it is silent compassion.
it means nothing. but it annoys people
The fact that they are always stopping. lol
Nothing it's really stupid and annoys me
Find what annoys them the most, and do it constantly...that always works for me ;)
i think they are just juelus i know i would
The translation is: Sextus is an annoying boy who always annoys Cornelia.
An annoyance is something which annoys, or an act or instance of annoying.
If something 'annoys the hell out of you' it simply means it annoys you very, very much. There doesn't seem a definite origin to the phrase, but there are many similar such phrases used throughout the English-speaking world, all saying something like 'annoys the ... out of you'.
The homophone of "a noise" is "an oise" when said out loud, as "oise" is pronounced similarly to "noise", but with a silent 'n' at the beginning.
annoys