transcription, транскрипция: [ ˈa-grə-ˌvāt ]
transitive verb
( -vat·ed ; -vat·ing )
Etymology: Latin aggravatus, past participle of aggravare to make heavier, from ad- + gravare to burden, from gravis heavy — more at grieve
Date: 1530
1. obsolete
a. : to make heavy : burden
b. : increase
2. : to make worse, more serious, or more severe : intensify unpleasantly
problems have been aggravated by neglect
3.
a. : to rouse to displeasure or anger by usually persistent and often petty goading
b. : to produce inflammation in
Usage:
Although aggravate has been used in sense 3a since the 17th century, it has been the object of disapproval only since about 1870. It is used in expository prose
when his silly conceit…about his not-very-good early work has begun to aggravate us — William Styron
but seems to be more common in speech and casual writing
a good profession for him, because bus drivers get aggravated — Jackie Gleason (interview, 1986)
& now this letter comes to aggravate me a thousand times worse — Mark Twain (letter, 1864)
Sense 2 is far more common than sense 3a in published prose. Such is not the case, however, with aggravation and aggravating. Aggravation is used in sense 3 somewhat more than in its earlier senses; aggravating has practically no use other than to express annoyance.