Verb
The word is derived from nag
of Nag
Source: Webster's dictionaryAaron began to learn the Dakota language. Isaac, like a newly ordained Doctor of Philosophy, after years of being nagged into learning, rejoiced to be invited to stand up and look important and teach. He was astonished by his own erudition and by the fact that his class of one did not walk out. Sinclair Lewis
I was extraordinarily lucky. I wrote a book because I wanted to see if I could write a mystery. Someone nagged me into sending it to a contest, which it won, after which I was offered a two-book contract, thus requiring the writing of a second book. Donna Leon
Life is like an overlong drama through which we sit being nagged by the vague memories of having read the reviews. John Updike
Thankfully, there was no annoying anti-virus / anti-malware pop-ups to deal with, though users will be nagged to register the system (on more than one occasion) through the MyASUS program. Source: Internet
JERRY SEINFELD: 23 HOURS TO KILL If anyone can draw laughs from the mundane — particularly the trivial problems that nagged at us before the coronavirus crisis struck — it’s Jerry Seinfeld. Source: Internet
A survivor of prostate cancer, the impotent Lomeli, who is 75, sleeps at night “like an effigy on a tomb,” nagged by regrets and suffering “a spiritual insomnia.” Source: Internet