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 exasperation [ig,zæspә'reiʃәn]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 恼怒, 恼怒的原因

  1. `Stop that noise,' he cried out in exasperation.
    `不要发出那种噪音,'他愤怒地大喊.
  2. Wu Sun-fu standing by the table, his hands clasped in front of his chest and a look of exasperation on his face.
    王和甫撇下那打字员,转身就跑,却看见吴荪甫两手抱在胸前,站在那大餐桌旁边,一脸的懊恼气色。
  3. There is much in this argument; and it is easy to share the exasperation he seems to feel with some exiled lobbyists.
    此话意味深长,内中流露的愤懑明摆着是冲着某些流亡说客去的。


exasperation
[ noun ]
  1. an exasperated feeling of annoyance

  2. <noun.feeling>
  3. actions that cause great irritation (or even anger)

  4. <noun.act>


Exasperation \Ex*as`per*a"tion\, n. [L. exasperatio: cf. F.
exasp['e]ration.]
1. The act of exasperating or the state of being exasperated;
irritation; keen or bitter anger.

Extorted from him by the exasperation of his
spirits. --South.

2. Increase of violence or malignity; aggravation;
exacerbation. ``Exasperation of the fits.'' --Sir H.
Wotton.

  1. Squinting, ad-libbing and at times tripping over his text, he none the less injected the right note of indignant exasperation that prompted repeated bursts of applause. Mr Prescott's basic thesis remained unchanged.
  2. He is serious-faced, but with a deep chuckle never far away. He can show exasperation, but has the Basque's approachability.
  3. The German concerns provoked exasperation from the allies, as well as a determination to convince the Germans that their perceptions are both wrong and dangerous to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
  4. He can make exasperation sound like fun.
  5. "We've been hit," he yells in exasperation.
  6. The tone of his remarks to reporters reflected exasperation and, at times, anger.
  7. "Tom Foley," O'Neill once said, in both exasperation and respect, "is a man who can see three sides of every issue." Sometimes more.
  8. The newly enlarged Carlton would be capitalised at more than Pounds 2bn. Yesterday Mr Green, shoes kicked off, chomping contentedly on a cigar, expressed exasperation at Labour MPs who condemned him for jumping the legislative gun.
  9. The predictable result, says Mr Wilson, is that people rapidly lost confidence in their ability to make moral judgments. Some of his own students, he relates with exasperation, are unwilling to condemn even the perpetrators of the Holocaust.
  10. "One year from today, the Meech Lake constitutional accord either lives or dies and some of the major players in the drama are already betraying hints of the exasperation they feel," the Toronto newspaper The Globe and Mail said Friday.
  11. But the letter also had an overtone of exasperation.
  12. In exasperation, he said 'How about mine?'
  13. Indeed, the State Department's on-the-record reaction to what Navy officers called the deliberate and dangerous Soviet bumping of American warships operating innocently in the Black Sea included comments that conveyed more exasperation than outrage.
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