Aggravating in spanish

Agravante

pronunciation: ɑgɹ̩ɑbɑnte part of speech: adjective
In gestures

aggravate = empeorar, agravar. 

Example: This situation has been severely aggravated by the sudden withdrawal of nearly a decade of federal largesse toward education and education-related activities.

more:

» aggravate + a situation = agravar una situación, empeorar una situación.

Example: The incapacity of the industrial sector to gainfully employ the surplus labour from agriculture have aggravated the situation of poverty, unemployment, and landlessness in the countryside.

aggravating1 = molesto, exasperante, irritante. 

Example: Finding dirt cheap airline tickets these days can be extremely aggravating because it's hard to know what a cheap price really is.

aggravating2 = agravante. 

Example: The determining factor for sentencing in death-penalty cases is what it should be -- the aggravating nature of the crimes.

more:

» aggravating circumstance = circunstancia agravante.

Example: Under Kentucky law, the death penalty only applies in murders in which an aggravating circumstance exists.

» aggravating factor = factor agravante.

Example: Aggravating factors are those factors that make a crime seem more egregious, such as prior felony convictions or choosing an especially vulnerable victim.

Aggravating synonyms

exasperating in spanish: irritante, pronunciation: ɪgzæspɜreɪtɪŋ part of speech: adjective exacerbating in spanish: exacerbando, pronunciation: ɪgzæsɜrbeɪtɪŋ part of speech: adjective intensifying in spanish: intensificando, pronunciation: ɪntensəfaɪɪŋ part of speech: adjective
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