aggravate
To make a bad situation even worse or to annoy someone.
Explanation at your level:
When something is bad, and you make it worse, you aggravate it. If you have a sore leg and you jump, you aggravate your leg. If you bother your friend, you aggravate them. It is a word for when things get a little bit harder or more annoying.
You use aggravate when a problem gets bigger. For example, if you are already tired and you keep working, you might aggravate your tiredness. It is also used when people feel annoyed because someone is acting in a way that is not helpful or kind.
Aggravate is a useful verb for describing negative changes. You can aggravate a medical condition by not resting, or aggravate a conflict by saying the wrong thing. It is common in both medical and social contexts to describe how a situation is deteriorating.
At this level, you should distinguish between aggravate and exacerbate. While they are synonyms, exacerbate is often used in more formal or academic writing for complex situations, while aggravate remains common in everyday speech for health issues and personal annoyances.
The nuance of aggravate lies in its ability to bridge the gap between physical deterioration and emotional irritation. In professional settings, use it to describe how external factors might aggravate existing tensions between groups or teams. It implies a process of escalation that is usually unwanted and detrimental to the outcome.
Etymologically, aggravate carries the weight of its Latin root gravis. In sophisticated discourse, it can describe the 'weighting' of a situation, making it more burdensome. Literary usage often employs it to describe how characters aggravate their own fates through poor decision-making, adding a layer of tragic inevitability to the word's usage.
Word in 30 Seconds
- Aggravate means to make a situation worse.
- It also means to annoy someone.
- It is related to the word gravity.
- Use 'exacerbate' for more formal contexts.
When you hear the word aggravate, think of adding fuel to a fire. It is a versatile verb used to describe making a negative situation worse or causing someone to feel annoyed.
If you have a sore knee and you go for a run, you aggravate the injury, meaning you make the pain more intense. Similarly, if you keep tapping your friend on the shoulder while they are trying to study, you are aggravating them. It is a word that implies a sense of friction or escalation.
It is important to note that while some people use 'aggravate' to simply mean 'annoy,' some strict grammarians prefer to reserve it for making situations worse, using 'irritate' for people. However, in modern English, both meanings are widely accepted and understood in daily conversation.
The word aggravate has deep roots in Latin. It comes from the verb aggravare, which is formed by combining ad- (to) and gravis (heavy). Literally, it meant 'to make heavier.'
In its earliest English usage, it was primarily used in a legal sense to describe making an offense 'heavier' or more serious. Over centuries, the meaning shifted from the literal 'adding weight' to the figurative 'making a bad situation worse.' By the 17th century, it began to take on the secondary meaning of 'to annoy,' as the feeling of being bothered feels like a heavy weight on one's patience.
It is fascinating how a word about physical weight evolved into a word about emotional and situational stress. It reminds us that language is fluid, constantly shifting to match how we perceive the world around us.
You will often see aggravate paired with nouns related to health or conflict. Common collocations include aggravate an injury, aggravate a condition, or aggravate the situation.
In a formal register, such as a medical report or a legal document, it is used to describe the worsening of a physical state. For example, 'The cold weather served to aggravate his arthritis.' In casual settings, you might hear someone say, 'Stop aggravating me!' when they are feeling bothered.
Because it carries a slightly negative connotation, it is rarely used in positive contexts. You wouldn't say you 'aggravated' a party, unless you made the party significantly worse! Always use it when you want to highlight that something unpleasant is becoming even more difficult to handle.
While 'aggravate' itself isn't the core of many idioms, it is often the result of them. Here are ways to express similar feelings:
- Rub salt in the wound: To make a painful situation worse.
- Push someone's buttons: To intentionally aggravate or annoy someone.
- Add insult to injury: To make a bad situation even more aggravating.
- Get under one's skin: To annoy or aggravate someone persistently.
- Fly off the handle: To react with anger when someone is aggravated.
Using these expressions alongside 'aggravate' helps you paint a clearer picture of the intensity of the situation you are describing.
Aggravate is a regular verb. Its forms are aggravates (present), aggravated (past), and aggravating (participle). It is a transitive verb, meaning it usually takes an object (e.g., 'He aggravated the situation').
Pronunciation: In IPA, it is /ˈæɡ.rə.veɪt/. The stress is on the first syllable. It rhymes with words like activate and captivate, though it carries a much heavier meaning.
A common grammatical trap is confusing it with 'irritate.' While they overlap, 'irritate' is almost exclusively for people, whereas 'aggravate' is more flexible. Always check if you are describing a person or a circumstance to choose the best fit for your sentence.
Fun Fact
It comes from 'gravis', which is also the root for 'gravity'.
Pronunciation Guide
Clear 'a' sounds.
Slightly nasal 'a'.
Common Errors
- Mispronouncing the 'gg' as a 'j' sound
- Missing the 'r' sound
- Stressing the wrong syllable
Rhymes With
Difficulty Rating
Commonly found in news.
Useful for academic essays.
Good for describing emotions.
Easy to hear.
What to Learn Next
Prerequisites
Learn Next
Advanced
Grammar to Know
Transitive Verbs
I aggravated the situation.
Passive Voice
The situation was aggravated.
Present Participle as Adjective
An aggravating sound.
Examples by Level
Do not aggravate your sore knee.
do not make worse
imperative
He is aggravating me.
he is annoying me
present continuous
The noise aggravated the baby.
made the baby annoyed
past tense
Don't aggravate the dog.
don't bother the dog
imperative
The rain aggravated the cold.
made the cold worse
past tense
She was aggravated by the wait.
annoyed by the wait
passive voice
It will aggravate the situation.
make it worse
future tense
Stop aggravating your brother!
stop annoying
imperative
The long walk aggravated my back pain.
His constant jokes are starting to aggravate me.
Don't say anything that might aggravate the boss.
The drought aggravated the water shortage.
I didn't mean to aggravate the problem.
She felt aggravated by the slow service.
The heat aggravated his headache.
Please don't aggravate the situation further.
The new policy only served to aggravate the employees.
He aggravated his injury by playing in the match.
Her tone of voice was meant to aggravate him.
The lack of sleep aggravated her anxiety.
The tension was aggravated by the lack of communication.
Don't let small things aggravate you.
The situation was aggravated by the storm.
He was visibly aggravated by the interruption.
The economic crisis was aggravated by poor leadership.
His comments only served to aggravate the existing tensions.
Medical experts warn that stress can aggravate heart conditions.
She tried not to let the delay aggravate her nerves.
The problem was aggravated by a series of unfortunate events.
He was clearly aggravated by the lack of progress.
The situation is being aggravated by misinformation.
I find his constant complaining quite aggravating.
The government's decision served to aggravate public unrest.
The underlying conflict was aggravated by the sudden change in policy.
His tendency to micromanage only aggravated his team's frustration.
The environmental impact was aggravated by industrial waste.
The situation was further aggravated by the lack of transparency.
She felt that her silence only aggravated the misunderstanding.
The legal dispute was aggravated by conflicting testimonies.
It is a situation that requires care so as not to aggravate it.
The geopolitical instability was significantly aggravated by the trade sanctions.
The artist's isolation served only to aggravate his creative block.
The systemic inequality was aggravated by the recent fiscal reforms.
The patient's condition was aggravated by a secondary infection.
The philosophical debate was aggravated by a lack of shared definitions.
His haughty demeanor served to aggravate the diplomatic impasse.
The historical trauma was aggravated by the insensitive remarks.
The fragility of the peace treaty was aggravated by minor skirmishes.
Common Collocations
Idioms & Expressions
"add insult to injury"
to make a bad situation worse
He lost his job, and to add insult to injury, his car broke down.
neutral"rub salt in the wound"
to make a painful experience more painful
Don't rub salt in the wound by talking about the game.
casual"get on someone's nerves"
to annoy someone
His constant talking is getting on my nerves.
casual"push someone's buttons"
to intentionally aggravate someone
She knows exactly how to push his buttons.
casual"fly off the handle"
to get very angry quickly
He flew off the handle when I mentioned the error.
casual"stir the pot"
to cause trouble or aggravate a situation
He loves to stir the pot during meetings.
casualEasily Confused
both mean to make worse
exacerbate is more formal
The heat exacerbated the situation.
both mean to annoy
irritate is only for people
His behavior irritates me.
opposite meaning
alleviate makes things better
Medicine alleviates pain.
adjective vs verb
aggravated is a state
I feel aggravated.
Sentence Patterns
Subject + aggravate + object
The noise aggravated the dog.
Subject + be + aggravated + by + object
I was aggravated by the delay.
Subject + aggravate + possessive + injury
He aggravated his injury.
Subject + serve to + aggravate + object
It served to aggravate the tension.
Subject + further + aggravate + object
The news further aggravated the crisis.
Word Family
Nouns
Verbs
Adjectives
Related
How to Use It
7
Formality Scale
Common Mistakes
Some purists dislike 'aggravate' for people.
Exacerbate sounds more academic.
It is a verb.
It is the opposite of 'alleviate'.
Needs double 'g'.
Tips
Memory Palace Trick
Imagine a heavy stone (grave) on your shoulder.
When Native Speakers Use It
Often used when talking about health.
Cultural Insight
Used heavily in legal contexts.
Grammar Shortcut
It is a transitive verb.
Say It Right
Stress the first syllable.
Don't Make This Mistake
Don't use it for positive things.
Did You Know?
It shares a root with gravity.
Study Smart
Pair it with 'situation'.
Formal vs Informal
Use exacerbate in essays.
Rhyme Time
It rhymes with activate.
Memorize It
Mnemonic
AGGRAVATE: A Grave situation gets worse.
Visual Association
A heavy rock being added to a pile.
Word Web
Challenge
Use the word in a sentence about your day.
Word Origin
Latin
Original meaning: To make heavier
Cultural Context
None.
Commonly used in both US and UK English.
Practice in Real Life
Real-World Contexts
Medical
- aggravate the injury
- aggravate the condition
- symptoms were aggravated
Workplace
- aggravate the tension
- aggravate the conflict
- aggravated by the workload
Legal
- aggravated assault
- aggravating circumstances
- aggravate the charges
Social
- aggravate the situation
- don't aggravate them
- feeling aggravated
Conversation Starters
"What is something that usually aggravates you?"
"Have you ever aggravated an injury by exercising?"
"How do you handle situations that aggravate your stress?"
"Do you think it is easy to aggravate people online?"
"What is the best way to avoid aggravating a conflict?"
Journal Prompts
Describe a time you felt aggravated by someone.
Write about a situation that was aggravated by bad timing.
How can we stop ourselves from being easily aggravated?
Reflect on a time you made a situation worse by accident.
Frequently Asked Questions
8 questionsThey overlap, but irritate is mostly for people.
No, it is only for negative things.
Aggravation.
It is neutral and widely used.
A-G-G-R-A-V-A-T-E.
Historically yes, but not today.
No, that would be incorrect.
Yes, it ends in -ed.
Test Yourself
The loud music will ___ my headache.
It makes the pain worse.
Which means to make a problem worse?
Aggravate means to increase severity.
Aggravate can be used to describe making an injury better.
It means to make it worse.
Word
Meaning
Opposite meanings.
Passive construction.
His constant interruptions are ___ me.
Present participle needed.
Which word is a synonym for aggravate in a formal context?
Exacerbate is formal.
You can aggravate a person.
It means to annoy them.
Word
Meaning
Contextual usage.
Complex sentence structure.
Score: /10
Summary
Aggravate is a powerful verb for describing when things get heavier, more painful, or more annoying.
- Aggravate means to make a situation worse.
- It also means to annoy someone.
- It is related to the word gravity.
- Use 'exacerbate' for more formal contexts.
Memory Palace Trick
Imagine a heavy stone (grave) on your shoulder.
When Native Speakers Use It
Often used when talking about health.
Cultural Insight
Used heavily in legal contexts.
Grammar Shortcut
It is a transitive verb.
Example
Applying heat to the wound might actually aggravate the inflammation.
Related Content
This Word in Other Languages
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abcredance
C1To formally grant credibility or validate the authenticity of a claim, process, or document based on rigorous evidence. It involves the transition of a statement or entity from a state of uncertainty to one of accepted institutional or logical fact.
abnasccide
C1Describing something that is characterized by a natural tendency to shed, detach, or be cut off at a specific stage of development or under certain conditions. It is most commonly used in botanical or technical contexts to describe parts that are designed to separate from the main body.
absorb
B2To take in or soak up energy, liquid, or other substances by chemical or physical action; also used metaphorically to mean taking in and understanding information or grasping the full attention of someone.
abstain
C1To voluntarily refrain from an action or practice, especially one that is considered unhealthy or morally questionable. It is also used formally to describe the act of choosing not to cast a vote in an election or deliberation.
abvictly
C1To decisively and abruptly resolve a complex situation or dispute by exercising overwhelming force or authority. It describes the act of bringing an immediate, non-negotiable end to a conflict, often bypassing traditional steps of negotiation.
abvitfy
C1The inherent capacity or latent potential within a system or individual to adapt quickly and effectively to unforeseen technological or structural changes. It describes a sophisticated form of resilience that allows for an immediate pivot and evolution without a loss of core function.
accelerate
C1To increase the speed or rate of something, or to make a process happen sooner than expected. In technical contexts, it refers to the rate of change of velocity, while in general contexts, it often describes the speeding up of progress or development.
accept
A1To agree to receive something that someone offers you, or to say yes to an invitation or a suggestion. It can also mean to believe that something is true or to recognize a situation as it is.
achieve
A2To successfully reach a goal or finish a task using your effort and skills. It describes the act of completing something positive after working hard for it.
acquiesce
C1To accept something reluctantly but without protest. It describes a situation where someone agrees to a demand or proposal, often because they feel they have no other choice or do not wish to argue.