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  1. HARASS definition: 1. to continue to annoy or upset someone over a period of time: 2. to continue to annoy or upset…. Learn more.

  2. The meaning of HARASS is exhaust, fatigue. How to use harass in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Harass.

  3. When you harass someone, you bother them to the point of exhaustion. It’s not that each attack is so severe, it’s the constant small attacks that wear someone out. If you harass your boss for a raise, you might end up getting fired instead!

  4. illegal behaviour towards a person that causes mental or emotional suffering, which includes repeated unwanted contacts without a reasonable purpose, insults, threats, touching, or offensive language: The company investigated claims of workplace harassment and racial discrimination.

  5. to trouble by repeated attacks, incursions, etc., as in war or hostilities; harry; raid. SYNONYMS 1. badger, vex, plague, hector torture. See worry. 2. molest. USAGE harass, a 17th-century French borrowing, has traditionally been pronounced (ˈhærəs), with stress on the first syllable.

  6. Harass definition: to disturb or bother persistently; torment, as with troubles or cares; pester. See examples of HARASS used in a sentence.

  7. 1. To subject (another) to hostile or prejudicial remarks or actions; pressure or intimidate. 2. To irritate or torment persistently: His mind was harassed by doubts and misgivings. 3. To make repeated attacks or raids on (an enemy, for example).

  8. Harass definition: To subject (another) to hostile or prejudicial remarks or actions; pressure or intimidate.

  9. Definitions of 'harass' If someone harasses you, they trouble or annoy you, for example by attacking you repeatedly or by causing you as many problems as they can. [...] More. Conjugations of 'harass' present simple: I harass, you harass [...] past simple: I harassed, you harassed [...] past participle: harassed. More. Synonyms of 'harass'

  10. Jul 24, 2024 · (specifically) To persistently bother (someone, or a group of people) physically or psychologically when such behaviour is illegal and/or unwanted, especially over an extended period . To put excessive burdens upon (someone); to subject (someone) to anxieties . To harass good people is no different than speaking ill of them.