0 to annoy or make angry -- menjengkelkan
The children’s chatter irritated him.
1 to make (a part of the body) sore, red, itchy etc -- merengsakan
Soap can irritate a baby’s skin.
Even the presence of newly wealthy entrepreneurs in the party irritated some party veterans who thought they could not coexist peacefully with the class enemies.
As a complex nomenclature is irritating, many scholars oppose the changing of names altogether.
From the initial contact they should begin to accumulate information about patients' preferences for food, clothes, what irritates them, what their habits are.
Aside from irritating lapses into scholar-as-hero jargon, the essay raises intriguing questions about gendered power, many of which it unfortunately does not answer.
Such errors are irritating, but they also raise doubts about the quality of the information on which the argument is based.
Such methods could be far more rewarding than public and, from the government's point of view, irritating remonstrances.
Older readers of the paper were irritated by the profusion of supplements and their bulk, while the paper lost money on them.
American action was not merely irritating; it was fraught with danger.