I harried a man who did not agree with me.
It is spelled aggravated. It means to be annoyed or perturbed. To be pissed off or harried. Almost angry but not quite.
agitated, anxious, troubled, bothered
No. Harrier is the thing or person who harries (bothers, annoys). The adjectives would be the participle forms of the verb (to harry) which are harrying (being done by the harrier) and harried (the one harried).
1970
the word rag in a sentence
I have been harried to write this sentence for this student.
"I didn't do anything wrong," said the raccoon looking harried.
The harried Mother of five was desperately trying to get dinner on the table, run a load of wash, and make all those kids sit down.
Harried means harassed, overworked, or overwhelmed. For example, "The harried mother tried her hardest not to yell at her children as she herded them into the car".
Happy hippos hop hastily.
I hurried my responses to finish the test within the time limits. The patrol hurried and harried the fleeing attackers. It was obvious the response was hurried.
Kinship is a familial or situational relationship. Example : "The clans put more value in kinship than in obeying the appointed officials." Example : "The harried clerk felt a kinship with the busy accounting staff."
She wanted to make her presence known at the party by bringing presents for the host.
It is spelled aggravated. It means to be annoyed or perturbed. To be pissed off or harried. Almost angry but not quite.
There is apparently no common word, but perhaps a proper noun. The letters spell several phrases such as "rather biased" and "harried beast."
No, "tormented" implies experiencing severe mental or emotional suffering, while "harried" suggests being bothered or harassed persistently by demands or difficulties.
No, the word 'harry' is a verb (harry, harries, harrying, harried), meaning to persistently harass, or to persistently carry out attacks on a place.The word 'Harry' (capital H) is a proper noun, the name of a person.