aggravated in the PONS Dictionary

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
When business-critical applications are aggravated by a poor user experience, the company risks its reputation coming under fire.
www.digitaljournal.com
The cartoons and the reaction to them aggravated already-strained relations.
en.wikipedia.org
Shielding materials were sometimes displaced to improve image quality, to make the machine lighter, or out of carelessness, and this aggravated the leakage.
en.wikipedia.org
As a result, the legal or illegal emigration problem would be aggravated.
en.wikipedia.org
That got aggravated and it ended up disrupting my breast stroke kick for about six weeks.
www.irishexaminer.com
As a result the conservator sued him for aggravated slander, which carries a possible three-year prison sentence.
en.wikipedia.org
Childhood poverty and ill health, aggravated by a bout of rickets, had left him with badly stunted legs.
en.wikipedia.org
Its situation at the time was further aggravated by the forceful counter-reformation.
en.wikipedia.org
He has been charged with forgery, mail fraud, aggravated identity theft and computer fraud.
www.telegraph.co.uk
He had been suffering from dyspepsia, aggravated by bronchial trouble, in previous years.
en.wikipedia.org

Look up "aggravated" in other languages


Choose your language Deutsch | English | Srpski