How To Use Exasperation In A Sentence

  • The young man raised his hands in exasperation - the calls were coming in heavy. THE UNORTHODOX MURDER OF RABBI MOSS
  • He seems to feel duty-bound to provoke a reaction whether it is outrage, exasperation, outright hostility or unreserved admiration.
  • Ryan growled with exasperation and pulled the covers back over him, even though he was stifling hot.
  • It is a sweet and pretty countenance that can become contorted into a Munchian shriek, a child's importunate obstinacy, a beleaguered housewife's exasperation, a hectoring soldier's grimace, or anything else.
  • No opportunity for zaniness is knowingly passed up, to the exasperation of the long-suffering staff.
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  • Mahoney clenched his fist in exasperation.
  • However, the exasperation over repeat offenders is completely reasonable.
  • Such exasperation may have led to posters being stolen and vandalised but there could be another reason.
  • Here a note of exasperation and irritation sometimes slips in.
  • However, this is only my revenge for much exasperation and deploration that they would never come away from their pestiferous walls, -- where, after all, they had a right to stay, and will not be blamed by the candid and unbebullet-whizzed reader that they did stay. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 27, January, 1860
  • At the same time, driven by less positive reasons - such as poverty and exasperation - we are witnessing a real growth of grey power.
  • Recoiling in exasperation at the tone produced by delicate official negotiations he asked me to take a laptop computer home to Glasgow and we worked on a complete redraft over a weekend.
  • There is growing exasperation within the government at the failure of these policies to reduce unemployment.
  • The department is unsure if the figure represents the whole industry and officials expressed exasperation about the lack of solid evidence. Times, Sunday Times
  • Whitlock removed his safety belt and cursed in exasperation. CODE BREAKER
  • The surprising and illuminating thing to Westerling was the inspired statement to the press from the Gray Foreign Office, adroitly appealing to Gray chauvinism and justifying the "intrepidity" of the Gray commander in response to so-called "pin-pricking" exasperations. The Last Shot
  • Richard Nixon repeatedly expressed his exasperation at having to work with an unresponsive bureaucracy.
  • “And after three years of secrecy and exasperation, I found that to complete it was impossible, —impossible. Certain First Principles
  • All the envy, exasperation and spite he filtered out of his own quiet, grid-based paintings he dumped into hellzapoppin 'art-world cartoons (wisely prologued in William Rubin's conservative but razor-sharp installation as big photostats near the entrance). Every Picture Tells
  • But it was an effort for him to talk, his voice so low that I could not always catch what he said, and sometimes he would collapse back on to the bed trying to hide his exasperation.
  • As the wife of Raymond, she would probably have lapsed by now into pinguitude and sloth -- unless discontent and exasperation had prevented. On the Stairs
  • Now instead of the anger and exasperation, an emotion more like dread clouded his mind.
  • Edwards smiled in exasperation and Key was still there at the end - unbeaten and unbowed.
  • I give a short yell of exasperation, which is muffled as Jessie claps a hand over my mouth.
  • This didn't bode well for his sister who threw up in her hands in exasperation and stomped her feet.
  • So it isn't so much an exasperation, but a mystification, almost amounting to irritation under questioning, that Berkovic should be disinterred from the mental plot to which the manager has evidently assigned him.
  • The exasperations of the war, and the still more acrimonious exasperations of the period of the political reconstruction and of the organization of northern missions at the South, gendered strifes that still delay the redintegration which is so visibly future of both of these divided denominations. A History of American Christianity
  • It made a muffled noise, of exasperation or curiosity or surprise. A Plague of Angels
  • Don't you all trouble 'bout my neuralgy," she returned with resigned exasperation as she stood up to pour the coffee out of the large tin boiler. The Voice of the People
  • said the steward who, with exasperation, surveyed the teenager who was wearing full cricket gear.
  • In exasperation Philip went to a London specialist who operated on his back two weeks ago, fusing the bottom two vertebrae together and adding a bone graft from his hips to lend the entire area added stability.
  • He is guileless, so sincere that he's practically transparent, and what you see is what you get - intelligence, decency, exasperation, bewilderment, and pain.
  • Her fits of passion, which are awful to behold, and are usually called teething, are no such thing; they are her natural exasperation, because we don't understand her, though she is talking an intelligible language. Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens
  • The organization has expressed its exasperation with the government.
  • 'I told you to wait outside, sir,' he said with exasperation, stating clearly that my faintness was my own fault. In The Frame
  • Passengers waiting on the platform breathe a collective sigh of exasperation.
  • Spear's face was full of exasperation and worry, as he shoved his way through the crowd.
  • “Few pastors can get self-support in return for words, words, words,” he wrote in a rare outburst of exasperation. PEARL BUCK IN CHINA
  • He smiled patiently, betraying only a small hint of exasperation.
  • The only sign of exasperation was the slight flush to her cheeks.
  • My search was met with an understanding exasperation, as though he'd hoped that I would not ask.
  • Mistress Wynter, at that fat soggy thing, that lag-last, so shiftless and useless about the house, lazing from rath to latte, and then to complete their exasperation, miching off into the woods to shirk her work so that the whole company had to turn out with a mort of trouble to hunt for the leg-trape. Customs and Fashions in Old New England
  • It made a muffled noise, of exasperation or curiosity or surprise. A Plague of Angels
  • A frown of exasperation lined her brow as she shook her dark head in bewilderment.
  • His mood ranged from nervousness and exasperation to contempt and defiance even anger.
  • And there was much exasperation from Beschizza as he fired off a polite British philippic at a gadget industry that can't seem to tell the difference between a UMPC and a subnotebook. Boing Boing
  • Considering he and Stimac put 16 hours a day into the place, his exasperation is justified.
  • Baited, bayed at through so many throats, his Grace, growing consumptive, inflammatory (with humeur de dartre), lies reduced to milk diet; in exasperation, almost in desperation; with 'repose,' precisely the impossible recipe, prescribed as the indispensable. The French Revolution
  • She waited a few moments, and then sighed in exasperation.
  • The organization has expressed its exasperation with the government.
  • His performance is all sly looks and bone-dry readings, held together by a general air of barely contained exasperation at the antics of the fools and knaves who surround him.
  • There is growing exasperation within the government at the failure of these policies to reduce unemployment.
  • The brown-haired boy mussed his hair in exasperation, growling in his frustration.
  • But, for the rest of us, trying to find detailed, in depth information on the net without paying a fortune is an exercise in frustration and exasperation. Future Scam: Cost-Saving for "Them" « L.E. Modesitt, Jr. – The Official Website
  • Who do you know in your life who is a source of pain, annoyance or exasperation?
  • Captain Spock observed their surroundings with an expression bordering on exasperation, then turned to survey the landing party. Killing Time
  • The doctor tried to reason with me but finally gave up with a look of exasperation.
  • Z explains it over and over with bug-eyed exasperation, pushing up his glasses. Camo Girl
  • I sighed in exasperation as I realised Evaline hadn't even started on dinner yet.
  • The weekend had zoomed past, leaving me staring at the formal Sunday dinner with a mixture of exasperation and ‘don't wanna go to school blues’.
  • Despite the exclamation mark, he talks in the flat, imperturbable vowels of Sussex, his voice rising not so much in volume as in exasperation.
  • Pensioned by the British Government, which permitted him to continue this absurd travesty, if his feeble exasperation over his predicament and his silly ostentations could be called by that name, this realmless potentate occupied his waking hours in futile revilings of the hand that at once smote and sustained him. The Flaw in the Sapphire
  • Perhaps in reaction to the comments of their unseen interlocutors, their countenances are frozen in exasperation - one man leans forward, preparing to lunge in protest, while the other agitatedly wags his pencil.
  • A loud squawk startled her, and she looked up to find the gull hanging over the drop-off and glaring at her in what looked like exasperation.
  • The exasperation disappears from their voices as they deal with customers.
  • The repressed laughter, the panic, the forced coughing and the exasperation of listening to Sava's story for the second time must have unbalanced his delicate liver functions.
  • Latin temperaments rose in exasperation in direct proportion to their owners' frustration.
  • The exasperation, while he seeks to put a lid on it, spills forth.
  • Finally, the detective sighed in exasperation, and ordered his partner to take the teacher away, cuffing his hands from behind.
  • I sigh in exasperation when they putter around and block the aisles.
  • In exasperation, Anne marched over and grabbed him in her firmest governessy hold.
  • She rolled her eyes in sheer exasperation.
  • They have been torturing each other for decades, giving vent to shouts and exasperations, though at night they sleep in adjoining double beds.
  • My feeling was more of exasperation at this point because I knew what we had gotten ourselves into.
  • He opened his mouth, fury and exasperation writ large. Times, Sunday Times
  • 'Since sectarians, as in general every kind of blunderer and miracle-man, are toppled by reality at each step, they live in a state of perpetual exasperation, complaining about the In Defence of Marxism
  • Her arms were thrown up in the air in exasperation, she turning away momentarily.
  • Finally, one rather rotund gentleman rose to his feet in red-faced exasperation. Christianity Today
  • My own daily dose of exasperation and humiliation comes courtesy of Bandit, a three-year-old Dalmatian.
  • And to top it all off, there are aphorisms, rubrics, musings, meditations, exhalations, exasperations.
  • His head dropped back on his pillow in complete exasperation. CHAINS OF COMMAND
  • choking exasperation and wordless shame
  • It made a muffled noise, of exasperation or curiosity or surprise. A Plague of Angels
  • Even though both candidates periodically recalled the instructions of their handlers to smile, each frequently expressed his exasperation with the other.
  • She said in exasperation, pushing her way in front of them once again.
  • But there was a tangible atmosphere of exasperation towards the week's end.
  • Latin temperaments rose in exasperation in direct proportion to their owners' frustration.
  • There was also a half hour of exasperation when I temporarily mislaid my handheld somewhere in the hospital.
  • My response to these complaints is a slight feeling of exasperation.
  • His tone towards his civilian counterparts is one of exasperation, sometimes contempt. Times, Sunday Times
  • The barman gave us a look of exasperation that I could remember giving a thousand technophobes before when they asked what the Internet was for.
  • So let us gather together from time to time to engage in vituperation and denigration and righteous indignation and exasperation so that each of us might amuse and rile as best we can. Think Progress » Ann Coulter to MoveOn: “How About Helping Out?”
  • Terel stopped in his tracks and turned to her, agitated exasperation on his face.
  • the exasperation of a...well-meaning cow worried by dogs
  • His bug-eyed expressions and yowls of exasperation don't give us a jot of insight into his obtuse character. 'Furry Vengeance': Coarse family film is a slapstick stinker
  • While the book has hints of exasperation and annoyance, it does not descend into fatalism or inevitability, always seeking to expose the basis of creative pathways for forestry.
  • His tone towards his civilian counterparts is one of exasperation, sometimes contempt. Times, Sunday Times
  • Galen sighed heavily with exasperation and shoved his chair back.
  • In fact he smiled on quite a few occasions, though probably more out of exasperation than anything else.
  • Mac's phone rang fifteen times before Stone jiggled the hang-up bar in exasperation to get the desk clerk back on the line. CORMORANT
  • I wanted to ask how she had endured the frustration, the exasperation, the stifling air, the imprisonment.
  • Welhaven endured the rationalist and republican rhetoric of Wergeland as long as he could, although with growing exasperation, until the rhapsodical author of Henrik Ibsen
  • She emitted a sound - a muffled cry of consternation or a sigh of exasperation, he couldn't be sure which - and swept past him.
  • The easy exasperation of the £1000-a-year man at the rates and his extreme patience under Imperial taxation is incomprehensible, unless you recognize this fact of his delocalization. Mankind in the Making
  • The sound coming from the other end of the line was such a gargle of noise that she wasn't sure if Dominic was growling or groaning in exasperation.

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