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  1. Dictionary
    harried
    /ˈharɪd/

    adjective

    • 1. feeling strained as a result of having demands persistently made on one; harassed: "harried detectives answer ringing phones"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of HARRIED is beset by problems : harassed. How to use harried in a sentence.

  3. HARRIED definition: 1. worried and angry, especially because people keep wanting things from you: 2. worried and…. Learn more.

  4. Harried definition: harassed, agitated, or troubled by or as if by repeated attacks; beleaguered. See examples of HARRIED used in a sentence.

  5. Someone who is harried is feeling the stress of being rushed, overworked, or harassed. A harried parent might be exhausted but still have to make 3 dozen cupcakes for school and help with a science project.

  6. 1. To disturb, distress, or exhaust by repeated demands or criticism; harass. See Synonyms at harass. 2. a. To attack or raid, as in war: Vikings harrying the coast. b. To force along, as by attacks or blows: "Blue jays were chasing a squirrel, harrying the creature from tree to tree" (Paul Theroux). 3. To batter or buffet.

  7. Harried Definition. Meanings. Synonyms. Sentences. Definition Source. Adjective. Verb. Filter. adjective. Rushed; panicked; overly busy or preoccupied. The entire place teemed with harried executives who had no time to talk to one another. Wiktionary. Synonyms: pestered. harassed. annoyed. vexed. verb.

  8. Many locals felt that the harried family should be left in peace. He had the harried air of a man with many obligations and better things to be getting on with. In less harried days, our memories might have done the work. For a set of harried editors at the end of a long day, it had a calming effect.

  9. All you need to know about "HARRIED" in one place: definitions, pronunciations, synonyms, grammar insights, collocations, examples, and translations.

  10. A complete guide to the word "HARRIED": definitions, pronunciations, synonyms, grammar insights, collocations, examples, and translations.

  11. Military to ravage, as in war; devastate: The troops harried the countryside. v.i. to make harassing incursions. bef. 900; Middle English herien, Old English her ( g) ian (derivative of here army); cognate with German verheeren, Old Norse herja to harry, lay waste. 1.