To harass a person could mean multiple things. 'A harassed mother' is considered to mean 'an annoyed mother', while 'A harassed woman' is often considered to mean 'a (sexually) bullied woman'.
Hassle is a recent very informal coinage, probably a conflation of harass ( or perhaps haggle) and tussle.
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.
The plural nouns for the verb to harass are harassers and harassments.The gerund form, harassing, is an uncountable noun.
The word "heckler" originated in the 19th century and is derived from the Middle English word "hekel," meaning to torment or harass. It originally referred to people who would try to disrupt performances or public speeches by shouting or making noisy interruptions.
A word that has the same meaning as another word is a synonym.
Annoy is a synonym for harass. It begins with the letter a.
to bother or harass
My dictionary provides two pronunciations for the word harass: * huh-ras * har-uh s
Torment.
synonyms for persecute are: chase, harass, torment, pursue, and several more..
harass, despoil, ravage, loot
bother
Hassle is a recent very informal coinage, probably a conflation of harass ( or perhaps haggle) and tussle.
The word devil is a noun, a common, singular noun. Devil is also a verb, meaning to harass or tease.
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.
vandalism,hurt,there's just so much
Talking about grammar, could you rephrase your question? As it is, it is gibberish.