Molesto in english

Annoying

pronunciation: ənɔɪɪŋ part of speech: adjective
In gestures

molestar = bother ; irk ; pester ; disrupt ; irritate ; trouble ; hassle ; bug ; tread on + Posesivo + toes ; spite ; annoy ; nag (at) ; disturb ; upset ; niggle ; importune ; gall ; peeve ; disturb + Posesivo + peace ; molest ; put + Posesivo + nose out of joint ; badger ; bend + Posesivo + ear ; cause + discomfort ; give + Nombre + the pip ; rattle ; mither. 

Example: Why bother, then, to create an alphabetical index to the classified file when you already have a printed alphabetical index to the schedules of the classification scheme?.Example: She had been told from time to time that he seemed to derive satisfaction from needling the staff, but she had never been able to pin down specifically what he does that irks them.Example: And there are those whom I have pestered from time to time over the past four years, and who have patiently answered my importunity.Example: Essentially, problem patrons can be considered in three groups: (1) the dangerous or apparently dangerous; (2) the patron who disrupts readers; and (3) the nuisance whose focus is the librarian.Example: Their education must accordingly be designed to prepare them for that future, however much this may irritate the myopics whose only concern is for the present.Example: This is a problem that has frequently troubled teachers.Example: Richins also included inconveniences such as special trips to complain, time and effort required to fill out form, being treated rudely, and having to hassle someone.Example: I have a question that has been bugging me since I upgraded to ProCite 5 some time ago.Example: For all the indisputable good the Dalai Lama does in terms of spiritual guidance, he seems reluctant to tread on any political toes.Example: Men's abuse of children is in many instances instrumental in order to coerce or retaliate against women, echoing the Greek myth of Medea who killed her own children to spite her father.Example: Library pests are any humans, large or microscopic beasts, library equipment or installations, or chemical and biological substances that hamper or annoy the reader.Example: This a book that I had admired but that had nagged at me for years.Example: Transcribe the data as found, however, if case endings are affected, if the grammatical construction of the data would be disturbed, or if one element is inseparably linked to another.Example: Especially if the new subject is one which upsets the previous structure of relationships, it will be difficult to fit into the existing order.Example: He was under the knife last week to treat the knee problem that has been niggling him.Example: He was a shiftless, good-for-nothing man and his shrewish wife was constantly importuning him.Example: It was the American attitude of superiority that galled them the most.Example: Things like talking over the performances and cutting to commercials in the middle of performances were really peaving the people who watched.Example: And yet I've never told people to pipe down when they were disturbing my peace with their too loud blatherings on a cell phone.Example: I swear I have never seen a person who gets bit, stung and otherwise molested by insects and spiders the way he does.Example: In petty things he tended to be a poor loser; a defeat in a tennis game tended to put his nose out of joint.Example: My employer is bullying and badgering me and trying to either make me quit or fire me.Example: She was the person that others would search out to bend her ear and many times they would not be able to walk away without a hug and an encouraging word.Example: Skin tags or acrochorda are usually benign, and they do not cause any discomfort unless they are quite large and get irritated frequently by jewelry or clothing.Example: She looked disdainfully at the boys sitting on the left of the room -- they gave her the pip.Example: The rumours of his departure rattled the talented youngster a little bit.Example: The lady there was very chatty and kept mithering us all night when we just wanted to listen to the live band playing.

more:

» molestar con preguntasheckle [Específicamente a un orador con preguntas, comentarios en voz alta, sonidos de desaprobación, etc] .

Example: In stark contrast, these students, who heckled the ambassador in a much smaller venue, are being criminally charged and could potentially face prison.

» molestarsestir + uneasilyget + Posesivo + knickers in a twist [Usado más comúnmente en el Reino Unido]get + Posesivo + panties in a bundle [Usado más comúnmente en los Estados Unidos]begrudgegrudgepiqueget + Posesivo + knickers in a knot [Usado más comúnmente en Australia] .

Example: She did stir uneasily when one day he exhorted her to be careful whom she was seen with, and when he advised her to remember that in her new and different setting people who fail to observe unwritten rules of acceptable behavior are in some people's eyes expendable.

Example: The trouble began when some journalists got their knickers in a twist over Reich's unusual theories -- one of these being the notion that every individual should have a healthy satisfying sex life.

Example: I cannot for the life of me understand what you see in the Serb's cause that gets your panties in a bundle.

Example: In fact, many successful working women begrudge their partner's lack of earning power.

Example: He did not grudge them the money, but he grudged terribly the risk which the spending of that money might bring on them.

Example: In one interview, piqued by this recurrent comment on his Irishness, he pointed out that he came not from idyllic emerald green surroundings.

Example: Darlene's got her knickers in a knot because mischievous little Molly has the look of a girl that would go all the way on the first date.

» molestarse porbe bothered bybridle at .

Example: It is impatient with Juctionville for its failure to move ahead as fast as it would like and is bothered by the city's drabness and general lack of class and culture.

Example: Some European strategists have bridled at this 'safety first' approach.

» molestarse (por)take + offence (at)take + umbrage (at) .

Example: And he isn't a very nice person, so Claire is going to take offence at some of the things he says.

Example: The Spanish have taken umbrage that a member of the British Royal Family has paid a visit to a British colony.

molesto = annoying ; cumbersome ; onerous ; uncomfortable ; uneasy ; vexatious ; irksome ; vexing ; untoward ; disruptive ; gnawing ; pesky ; distracting ; off-putting ; ill-at-ease ; nagging ; obtrusive ; importunate ; bothersome ; exasperated ; niggling ; miffed ; troublesome ; aggravating ; niggly . 

Example: Inconsistencies are mostly merely annoying, although it can be difficult to be sure whether a group of citations which look similar all relate to the same document.Example: Any shelf arrangement systems which do not permit ready location of specific documents are cumbersome for the user or member of staff seeking a specific document.Example: Sub-arrangement under an entry term can alleviate the onerous task of scanning long lists of entries under the same keyword.Example: And making matters worse, this uncomfortable group sat in a suburban sitting-room flooded with afternoon sunlight like dutifully polite guests at a formal coffee party.Example: Hawthorne gave an uneasy laugh, which was merely the outlet for her disappointment.Example: It is undeniable that the ripest crop of vexatious litigants, pyramidologists, and assorted harmless drudges is to be gathered in the great general libraries of our major cities.Example: The old common press was a brilliant and deservedly successful invention, but by the end of the eighteenth century its limitations were beginning to seem irksome.Example: Knowing precisely who is responsible for specific library services and who will make decisions relieves the uncertainty that can be particularly vexing to a neophyte (and paralyzing to library services).Example: Make sure everyone involved is aware of timetable and room changes and any other administrative abnormalities; and as far as possible prevent any untoward interruptions.Example: The crisis in South African education -- particularly black education -- has resulted from the disruptive effects of apartheid.Example: the underlying mood of the movement is a gnawing impatience with the system.Example: The article is entitled 'Small solutions to everyday problems: those pesky URLs'.Example: I think that Mr. Scilken's point was that there's so much material on the traditional three-by-five card that it's less useful, that it's distracting, in fact, and does a disservice to the public library.Example: Some children are prepared to patronize the shop, and use it in quite a different way, when they find the library (however well run) stuffy or off-putting.Example: One quite serious barrier to improvement is the reluctance of users to tell librarians of their feelings, but perhaps it is expecting too much of them to complain that they are ill-at-ease.Example: With inflated prices, the nagging question was whether consumers were being bilked by the market.Example: But the present revision, incorporating ISBD, will literally clutter the entries with obtrusive redundancies and esoterics that will only obscure the content of the entries and obstruct the use of the catalog.Example: She concludes that this problem probes the importunate boundaries separating man from beast and the natural from the monstrous.Example: He shows a masterly command of imagery throughout, but his style has always left little margin for error, and the errors here are bothersome.Example: He was drumming on his desk with exasperated fingers, his mouth quirked at the corners, as if saying: 'Wriggle out of that!'.Example: I always have this niggling doubt about companies that don't provide a telephone number on their websites.Example: These are just superfluous rantings of miffed children.Example: Measures to prevent such incidents include fitting burglar alarms in libraries and taking quick and decisive action against troublesome users.Example: Finding dirt cheap airline tickets these days can be extremely aggravating because it's hard to know what a cheap price really is.Example: I am about 7 weeks pregnant and this afternoon started with a niggly ache on my left side and also where my left kidney is.

more:

» comportamiento molestodisruptive behaviour .

Example: The article is entitled 'Disorderly conduct: crime and disruptive behaviour in the library'.

» de un modo molestoannoyingly .

Example: Rehyping old stuff as if it were new is not only annoyingly deceptive but doesn't sell any books to suspicious customers.

» espíritu molestopoltergeist .

Example: In the end, his crude language and fiery personality limited him to the role of redneck poltergeist.

» estar molestobe displeasedget + Posesivo + knickers in a twist [Usado más comúnmente en el Reino Unido]get + Posesivo + knickers in a bundleget + Posesivo + panties in a bundle [Usado más comúnmente en los Estados Unidos]put + Nombre + offget + Posesivo + knickers in a knot [Usado más comúnmente en Australia] .

Example: They were displeased, as were the men, that we should be the masters, and should behave towards each other in this way.

Example: The trouble began when some journalists got their knickers in a twist over Reich's unusual theories -- one of these being the notion that every individual should have a healthy satisfying sex life.

Example: Now before anyone gets their knickers in a bundle over that statement let me clarify.

Example: I cannot for the life of me understand what you see in the Serb's cause that gets your panties in a bundle.

Example: Whatever the situation, prepared for or unexpected, it is always too easy to overplay one's hand, praising a book so extravagantly, so effusively, that many children are put off.

Example: Darlene's got her knickers in a knot because mischievous little Molly has the look of a girl that would go all the way on the first date.

» lo molesto decumbersomeness  .

Example: Such a huge file is only useful, given what we know about the cumbersomeness of the present card catalog, when one has an electronic means of sorting and searching.

» personas molestas, lasnuisance, the [Expresión usualmente acompañada del artículo] .

Example: Essentially, problem patrons can be considered in three groups: (1) the dangerous or apparently dangerous; (2) the patron who disrupts readers; and (3) the nuisance whose focus is the librarian.

» sentirse molestostir + uneasilylook + uncomfortablefeel + wrong .

Example: She did stir uneasily when one day he exhorted her to be careful whom she was seen with, and when he advised her to remember that in her new and different setting people who fail to observe unwritten rules of acceptable behavior are in some people's eyes expendable.

Example: The women will either look uncomfortable and make a hasty exit or will stand there with blank looks on their faces pretending not to have heard.

Example: Usually, when I have trouble sleeping it's not because I feel wrong or anything like that, it just happens.

» sentirse molesto porbe embarrassed at .

Example: I have been extremely embarrassed at having to help people -- Blacks, women, and others -- through the subject heading list.

» ser algo molestobe a thorn in + Posesivo + sidebe a thorn in + Posesivo + flesh .

Example: 'It's finally come to a showdown with Stuart Wronski. I guess you know he's been a thorn in my side for a long time. But he's finally gone too far, and I've got to do something about it.' He bit his lip, and looked at the floor.

Example: Another problem was nursing a grudge, making friends with the enemies to get back to someone whom she thought was a thorn in her flesh.

» ser molestobe disturbing .

Example: We are used to background noise in air conditioned buildings but the introduction of additional and unfamiliar sounds from AV equipment may be disturbing.

» verdad molestainconvenient truth .

Example: Everyone is riding the hype of 'An Inconvenient Truth,' and even Congress has caught the fever... but it doesn't feel rigth yet.

Molesto synonyms

pesky in spanish: maldito, pronunciation: peski part of speech: adjective vexation in spanish: vejación, pronunciation: vekseɪʃən part of speech: noun vexatious in spanish: vejatorio, pronunciation: vekseɪʃəs part of speech: adjective galling in spanish: mortificante, pronunciation: gɔlɪŋ part of speech: adjective annoyance in spanish: molestia, pronunciation: ənɔɪəns part of speech: noun vexing in spanish: molesto, pronunciation: veksɪŋ part of speech: adjective irritation in spanish: irritacion, pronunciation: ɪrɪteɪʃən part of speech: noun teasing in spanish: burlas, pronunciation: tizɪŋ part of speech: noun irritating in spanish: irritante, pronunciation: ɪrəteɪtɪŋ part of speech: adjective pestiferous in spanish: pestífero, pronunciation: pestɪfɜrəs part of speech: adjective disagreeable in spanish: desagradable, pronunciation: dɪsəgriəbəl part of speech: adjective pestering in spanish: molestar, pronunciation: pestɜrɪŋ part of speech: adjective nettlesome in spanish: nettlesome, pronunciation: netəlsəm part of speech: adjective bothersome in spanish: molesto, pronunciation: bɑðɜrsəm part of speech: adjective troubling in spanish: preocupante, pronunciation: trʌbəlɪŋ part of speech: adjective plaguy in spanish: molesto, pronunciation: pleɪgi part of speech: adjective, adverb plaguey in spanish: latoso, pronunciation: plægi part of speech: adjective
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