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Yet, over the next few days, media coverage focused on the vice president's interruptions, audible sighs and disdainful exasperation toward his rival, and largely ignored Mr. Bush's substantive mistakes.
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Izzie, a bundle of idiosyncrasies who tends toward exasperation and is frequently seen running wielding a kitchen knife with threatening absent-mindedness, is prone to malapropisms: "Now you're commitin' incense," she admonishes Warn about his continuing interest in Pearl.
Mr. Gibson expressed exasperation with Ms. Palin toward the end of the first interview segment, shown on "World News" complaining that she had buried him in "a blizzard of words" as he sought a direct response to his question of whether the United States had the right to attack terrorists in remote areas of Pakistan without the Pakistani government's approval.
It's a place where one's exasperation, affection, and good will toward another person combine to form a particularly inspirational style of ball-busting.
Given the exasperation that some have expressed toward the news media, Ms. Matalin said, "He did as good a job as anyone in that situation could do".
Though the campaign privately maintains an attitude of quiet exasperation and good-natured eye-rolling toward Mr. Trump, it is publicly loath to criticize him.
This is what exasperation looks like: A.J. Burnett standing toward the front of the pitcher's mound, hands atop his head, blank stare on his face.
You sometimes get the sense that the reason Hollywood makes so many stalker movies is to express the exasperation that the stars and the film-makers feel toward their fans.
Fanny's indulgence toward her husband is broken by signs of brittle exasperation and resentment that their circumstances should be so reduced.
He dealt instead with the courage shown by "working people" in Soweto, Santiago and Tiananmen Square and by the "young workers" slain in the Budapest uprising way back in 1956.The exasperation of those rag-trade workers in 1995 goes a long way toward explaining why, later in the same year, Mr Kirkland lost the most secure job in the United States.
He fights an inclination toward grudges ("acrimony pageants") and, now and then, with weariness or exasperation, has had to cudgel back against charges of misogyny and, more lately, Islamophobia.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com