Exasperate in a sentence as a verb

Tube amps do some really funky mixing, which can exasperate FFTs by giving weird/wrong results.

Gravel roads would would slow the effective max speed down to a crawl which would further exasperate traffic.

So I do not think it is good to insult, exasperate, degrade or demean a creator of a language.

" chanting, but it does exasperate me a little some times how little-known Android's "intents" feature is.

"They are aware of that, but are also aware that local news is different and could exasperate things in terms of misinformation.

> There is fairly strong evidence that sleep deprivation can trigger or exasperate [sic] depression ...This is one I'm seeing more and more often.

It may even exasperate them, as it falsely implies that the problem is with individual overstepping prosecutors rather than a system in which it's the norm.

While migraines can be caused by anything, usually from allergic reactions, caffeine tends to exasperate or alleviate tension headaches.

For example, I have a friend who is a Vietnam Vet that suffers from agent orange related illnesses; these illnesses exasperate more common conditions, namely diabetes.

Automated systems can exasperate the problem of persecuting the innocent.

If this system is implemented, doesn't that mean that the "new kids" will also have access to this system and may use it to exasperate HN's "new kids" problem?What about modifying the existing HN guidelines to include comments and promote the guidelines more?

The economy depends on peace and geopolitical stability,not being able to respond properly to a crisis requiring military action can lead to scenarios that exasperate economic recovery.

Exasperate definitions

verb

exasperate or irritate

See also: exacerbate aggravate

verb

make furious

See also: infuriate incense

verb

make worse; "This drug aggravates the pain"

See also: worsen aggravate exacerbate