0 present participle of harry
1 to repeatedly demand something from someone, often causing them to feel worried or angry:
She harried the authorities, writing letters and gathering petitions.
That would not be harrying or harassing, would it?
Sometimes a movement is imposed upon them by people pushing them away and harrying them about.
It is no use villifying them, smearing them, harrying them, threatening them and, finally, expropriating them.
They are perpetually harrying them and asking that they should put it through, and driving them.
The question of harrying or embarrassing has nothing to do with a point of order.
They feel they could do with a little less chasing and harrying.
It certainly is a kind of harrying, which appears in every way objectionable.
Why you should go on harrying men whose lives for more than twelve months have been made a burden to them?