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verb

aggravate

AG-ruh-vayt
verb
1
To make a bad situation, problem, or injury worse.
"Stress can aggravate an existing health condition."
"His comments only aggravated the dispute."
2
To annoy or irritate someone.
"Her constant tapping aggravated everyone in the office."
"It aggravates me when people are late."

How to Use Aggravate

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishTo make something worse, or to annoy someone.

Common mistake

In careful formal writing, "aggravate" traditionally means "make worse" (a situation), not "annoy" (a person) — though the "annoy" sense is now extremely common in everyday speech.

Common pairings
aggravate a condition aggravate an injury aggravate the situation

Word Forms

more aggravate comparative, aggravated past tense, aggravates singular, most aggravate superlative

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Fill the Gap

Can you complete this real example?

Stress can _____ an existing health condition.

Etymology

From Latin aggravare ("to make heavier"), from ad- ("to") + gravare ("to weigh down"), from gravis ("heavy") — the same root as "grave" and "gravity."

Related Words

Rhymes for aggravate

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Definitions: FreeDict original editorial