Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. adjective. formal uk / ɪˈræs.ə.b ə l / us / ɪˈræs.ə.b ə l / Add to word list. made angry easily: She's becoming more and more irascible as she grows older. Synonyms. bad-tempered. choleric formal. short-tempered. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Bad-tempered. argumentative. bad-tempered. be hell on wheels idiom.

  2. Jul 12, 2024 · irascible ( comparative more irascible, superlative most irascible) Easily provoked to outbursts of anger; irritable . Synonyms: cantankerous, choleric, cranky, bad-tempered, ill-tempered, hot-tempered; see also Thesaurus: irritable. A History of New York, from the Beginning of the World to the End of the Dutch Dynasty. The divine Plato, whose ...

  3. The meaning of IRASCIBLE is marked by hot temper and easily provoked anger. How to use irascible in a sentence. Irascible Has an Angry History

  4. adjective. formal us / ɪˈræs.ə.b ə l / uk / ɪˈræs.ə.b ə l / Add to word list. made angry easily: She's becoming more and more irascible as she grows older. Synonyms. bad-tempered. choleric formal. short-tempered. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Bad-tempered. argumentative. bad-tempered. be hell on wheels idiom.

  5. Irascible definition: easily provoked to anger; very irritable. See examples of IRASCIBLE used in a sentence.

  6. If you're irascible, you get angry easily — perhaps blowing up in rage when someone brushes into you.

  7. Definition of irascible adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. Irascible Definition. ĭ-răsə-bəl, ī-răs- Meanings. Synonyms. Sentences. Definition Source. Origin. Adjective. Filter. adjective. Easily angered; quick-tempered. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. Showing or resulting from a quick temper or a fit of anger. An irascible reply. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. Synonyms:

  9. 1. Prone to outbursts of temper; easily angered. 2. Characterized by or resulting from anger. [Middle English, from Old French, from Late Latin īrāscibilis, from Latin īrāscī, to be angry, from īra, anger; see eis- in Indo-European roots .] i·ras′ci·bil′i·ty, i·ras′ci·ble·ness n. i·ras′ci·bly adv.

  10. If you describe someone as irascible, you mean that they become angry very easily.