1. irritated - Adjective
2. irritated - Verb
4. irritated - Adjective Satellite
of Irritate
Source: Webster's dictionaryIf you feel irritated by the absurd remarks of two people whose conversation you happen to overhear, you should imagine that you are listening to a dialogue of two fools in a comedy. Arthur Schopenhauer
Perhaps if we saw what was ahead of us, and glimpsed the follies, and misfortunes that would befall us later on, we would all stay in our mother's wombs, and then there would be nobody in the world but a great number of very fat, very irritated women. Daniel Handler
There has been growing quite a strain of irritating feeling between our government and the Russians and it seems to me that it is a time for me to use all the restraint I can on these other people who have been apparently getting a little more irritated. Henry L. Stimson
The studied, unquestioning pace of my family irritated me. Emanuel Celler
Knowledge, having irritated and stimulated our appetite for power, will lead us inexorably to our ruin. Emil Cioran
Just because you are irritated by a mosquito, you burn the mosquito curtain. Malay Proverb