Causing irritation or annoyance.
Extremely annoying or displeasing.
Sinônimos
Examples for "annoying"
Examples for "annoying"
1Workers aren't taking action because they want to be annoying, she said.
2This annoying little brat addressed the UN on the so-called climate crisis.
3This didn't seem like one of her annoying, yet ultimately innocent causes.
4They wear annoying scarfs and talk about podcasts from five years ago.
5It's probably really annoying to hear that first thing in the morning.
1Though the question was meant to be teasing, Lauren considered it seriously.
2Ultimately, teasing out the technical problems may be only half the battle.
3At this point, I should caution against taking my Neville-teasing entirely seriously.
4The words were teasing, but there were serious undertones to his voice.
5A handsome man? His tone was teasing, but his question was serious.
1For five minutes they discussed Blomkvist's shortcomings in the most irritating terms.
2Sabina smiled, pleased that he found their situation amusing rather than irritating.
3The man in question would have no idea how irritating it was.
4The two-second delay on the line, that irritating echo, didn't help matters.
5Some people find them drying and irritating because they often contain alcohol.
1Donaldson's betrayal was seen as particularly galling, given his impeccable republican credentials.
2The answer is galling to EU diplomats and foreign ministers, but telling.
3But the blow at the moment of the stroke is very galling.
4The last words were galling, in the extreme, to Raoul de Fontaine.
5The knowledge was more galling than the bare fact of his abduction.
1Halfway across the cabin's great room, he heard that pesky noise again.
2Sure, the chief had suffered a pesky episode a few years back.
3Well, for example, there are those pesky laws of physics and biology.
4However those other pesky sprinters aren't at all intimidated by his presence.
5That pesky Shepherd Dog's sorta responsible for any trouble you might've had.
1One of them said the action was unjustified, vexatious, premature and excessive.
2The delay was vexatious; but Saturday the twenty-second would do as well.
3The whole position is in the highest degree artificial, misleading, and vexatious.
4Perhaps the most vexatious god was he who ruled the Floating Islands.
5This debate was eventually parked by Justice Greves, as ingermane and vexatious.
1You can even bring your friend-youknow, the one Roy was pestering.
2I guessed that Spelikon must have been pestering him with questions too.
3Why did you tell your neighbor that a reporter was pestering you?
4And I kept on pestering the man. And pester Pelé Toye did.
5But that was very far from setting a term to his pestering.
1What a bothersome world this is; there is no finality about anything.
2But it was bothersome to know that they were coming toward him.
3But the police were so bothersome in this part of the world.
4He frowned irritably, as though I'd asked him something bothersome and insignificant.
5Without their marshy breeding ground, those bothersome biting insects had largely disappeared.
1You bury your seamen upon the pestiferous shores; and, shocking to humanity!
2The air is pestiferous; warm and diseased, it fans us as we approach.
3Yet the atmosphere of pestiferous fragrance had attracted, rather than repelled.
4There was really only one drawback-thepestiferous draft-boards that never stopped snooping round.
5There was only this pestiferous overlaying of shame and cowardice to be removed.
1You know this plaguy memory of mine-whata forgetful fellow I am.
2There is here no tiresome rivalry of wits, no plaguy intellectual effort.
3There's some pretty bad travelling and a plaguy bit of swamp ahead.
4What, Mary, always singing doleful ditties, and moping over these plaguy books.
5It'll cost you plaguy sight more'n that, and blood, too, like enough.
1TRYGAEUS My legs pain me; it is such a plaguey long journey.
2Now be keerful and not run afoul of the plaguey lye leech.
3He was only too plaguey sure of himself to feel any anxiety.
4Kiss me, lad, if you can find room between these plaguey bandages.
5La!-forsure he writes not as he did, but is plaguey busy.
1Drummer had started crying, a nettlesome sound, and he wouldn't be pacified.
2The most nettlesome issues for industry are security and accounting.
3The timing involved in selling it, though, can be nettlesome.
4A former senior executive at one of the two companies also found the regulations nettlesome.
5This leads us to the nettlesome subject of authenticity.
1Lucy took no note of this vexing phenomenon and continued to speak:
2The truly vexing problems are turning out to be the medical ones.
3The builders have moved on to the vexing problem of my freezer.
4Great Britain's successes in the Games of the 29th Olympiad were vexing.
5But of the two the form of Hameed remains the more vexing.
6The question of speedy versus delayed publication is a very vexing one.
7It was vexing his having moved round the corner, into North Street.
8He wondered if he were still vexing his soul over the irrevocable.
9Stop your greeting, Callum, and not be vexing our friends the gentlemen.
10I shall determine den more perfectly dis vexing subject of your sanity.
11At any rate, there was no use vexing herself about Arthur now.
12Brendan Gleeson plays a decent priest confronted with a vexing moral dilemma.
13Once again, archaeologists run into a vexing lack of artefacts showing this.
14You just don't understand how vexing it can be, being a God.
15That way, we hope, the vexing problem of freedom and security will disappear.
16Legal issues might be almost as vexing as technical ones, some experts believe.
Vexing nas variantes da língua
Estados Unidos da América