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"Irritated" is a form of "irritated", an adjective which is often translated as "irritado". "Angry" is an adjective which is often translated as "enojado". Learn more about the difference between "irritated" and "angry" below.
irritated(
ih
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rih
-
tey
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dihd
)An adjective is a word that describes a noun (e.g., the big dog).
1. (angered)
a. irritado
Tread lightly around David today; he seems irritated about something.Ándate con cuidado con David hoy; parece estar irritado por algo.
2. (medicine)
a. irritado
I changed to a different kind of dish soap and my hands are no longer irritated.Cambié a un tipo diferente de jabón para lavar platos y ya no tengo las manos irritadas.
angry(
ahng
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gri
)An adjective is a word that describes a noun (e.g., the big dog).
1. (annoyed)
a. enojado (Latin America)
Regionalism used in Latin America: all the countries in South America, Central America, and the Caribbean. Does not include Spain.
The actor was angry when he found out he'd been replaced.El actor estaba enojado cuando se enteró de que lo habían reemplazado.
a. airado
Emma's boyfriend seems to be quite an angry young man.El novio de Emma parece tener un carácter algo airado.
a. embravecido (sea)
We did not dare to sail the angry sea.No nos atrevimos a navegar en el mar embravecido.
b. tormentoso (sky)
The skies were dark and angry before the hurricane.El cielo estaba oscuro y tormentoso antes del huracán.