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Discover LudwigThe word 'exasperate' is correct and usable in written English
You can use it to refer to somebody or something that frustrates, annoys, or irritates you. For example, "The frequent power outages in my neighborhood are beginning to exasperate me."
Dictionary
exasperate
verb
To frustrate, vex, provoke, or annoy; to make angry.
Exact(60)
With that in mind, here are my top three funniest moments: 3. The wiggers who exasperate Nick Sobotka in series two.
They see all politicians, including her, as freeloaders and doubt her motivation for seeking a top job in government.In this section Out of the comfort zone Into the meat-grinder Feast and famine Barrel of laughs The iron lady Move over, brother Correction: Somalia ReprintsThe charges exasperate her.
THERE are some things Ayaan Hirsi Ali loves about her adopted country, and others that exasperate her.
A diplomatic flurry may exasperate foreign friends, and lead to little.
That is starting to exasperate the United States, hitherto studiously cautious towards Mr Chavez.
But in Asunción implementation of this was postponed yet again.Mercosur's paralysis is beginning to exasperate businessmen.
Yet it seems that loyal friends such as Mr Blair are not always listened to either.France has its usesPrickly, independent-minded France may exasperate the Americans at times, but even within the Western alliance it can sometimes be useful to have one power that speaks its mind.
Mr Asquith's pronouncement showed the baselessness of this view, used by German jingoes to protract and exasperate the war; and the German Chancellor's recent endorsement of Herr Scheidemann's repudiation of territorial ambitions on Germany's part has also served to bring the possibility of a settlement nearer.
The RMT's intransigence (or its determination, depending on your point of view) was even enough to exasperate Ken Livingstone, London's famously left-wing former mayor.
His boss humiliates him, his cubicle drives him crazy, his fellow employees exasperate him; to cap it all, his dog, Dogbert, sets up in business as a management consultant.
Such attitudes exasperate some in the KRG as well as the general public and it is easy to sympathise with their frustration.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com