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aggravate

Transitive Verb
past: aggravatedpp: aggravateding: aggravating

This term carries a strong sense of escalation, where an existing negative state is pushed toward a more critical or unbearable level. It is frequently used in medical contexts to describe the worsening of a symptom or injury, as well as in social contexts to describe the intensification of a conflict. In casual speech, it is often used interchangeably with irritate to describe the act of annoying a person. However, in formal or technical writing, a sharp distinction is maintained: to irritate is to provoke a reaction, while to aggravate is to make a pre-existing condition more severe.

Meanings

Transitive Verb
[~ something]

To make a bad situation, problem, or negative feeling worse or more severe.

"The heavy rain served only to aggravate the already dire flooding situation."

Transitive Verb
[~ someone]

To annoy or exasperate someone, typically by repeated actions or persistent irritation.

"His constant whistling began to aggravate his coworkers during the long meeting."

Transitive Verb
[~ something]

To make a physical injury, medical condition, or disease more severe or intense.

"Walking on a sprained ankle will only aggravate the injury and slow the healing process."

Related Words

Last Updated: June 13, 2026Report an Error