Tire vs Irritate - What's the difference?
tire | irritate | Related terms |
To become sleepy or weary.
* {{quote-news
, year=2012
, date=September 7
, author=Phil McNulty
, title=Moldova 0-5 England
, work=BBC Sport
To make sleepy or weary.
To become bored or impatient (with)
To bore
(obsolete) Accoutrements, accessories.
* Philips
(obsolete) Dress, clothes, attire.
* 1590 , Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene , I.vii:
*, New York Review of Books 2001, p.66:
A covering for the head; a headdress.
* Spenser
Metal rim of a wheel, especially that of a railroad locomotive.
(lb) The rubber covering on a wheel; a tyre.
A child's apron covering the upper part of the body, and tied with tape or cord; a pinafore. Also tier.
(obsolete) To dress or adorn.
* Bible, 2 Kings ix. 30
(obsolete) To seize, pull, and tear prey, as a hawk does.
* Shakespeare
* Ben Jonson
(obsolete) To seize, rend, or tear something as prey; to be fixed upon, or engaged with, anything.
* Chapman
* Shakespeare
A tier, row, or rank.
* Milton
(lb) To provoke impatience, anger, or displeasure.
*
*:Thanks to that penny he had just spent so recklessly [on a newspaper] he would pass a happy hour, taken, for once, out of his anxious, despondent, miserable self. It irritated him shrewdly to know that these moments of respite from carking care would not be shared with his poor wife, with careworn, troubled Ellen.
(lb) To introduce irritability or irritation in.
(lb) To cause or induce displeasure or irritation.
(lb) To induce pain in (all or part of a body or organism).
(lb) To render null and void.
:(Archbishop Bramhall)
In intransitive terms the difference between tire and irritate
is that tire is to become bored or impatient (with while irritate is to cause or induce displeasure or irritation.In transitive terms the difference between tire and irritate
is that tire is to bore while irritate is to induce pain in (all or part of a body or organism).In obsolete terms the difference between tire and irritate
is that tire is to seize, rend, or tear something as prey; to be fixed upon, or engaged with, anything while irritate is to render null and void.As a noun tire
is accoutrements, accessories.tire
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) tiren, tirien, teorien, from (etyl)Alternative forms
* (l) (dialectal)Verb
(tir) (of)citation, page= , passage=As Moldova understandably tired after a night of ball chasing, Everton left-back Baines scored his first international goal as his deflected free-kick totally wrong-footed Namasco.}}
- I tire of this book.
Synonyms
*References
External links
* *Etymology 2
From (etyl)Alternative forms
* (rubber covering on a wheel) tyreNoun
(en noun)- the tire of war
- Ne spared they to strip her naked all. / Then when they had despoild her tire and call, / Such as she was, their eyes might her behold.
- men like apes follow the fashions in tires , gestures, actions: if the king laugh, all laugh […].
- On her head she wore a tire of gold.
Usage notes
* Tire is one of the few words where Canadian usage prefers the US spelling over the British spelling.Verb
(tir)- [Jezebel] painted her face, and tired her head.
Etymology 3
(etyl) .Alternative forms
* tyreVerb
(tir)- Even as an empty eagle, sharp by fast, / Tires with her beak on feathers, flesh, and bone.
- Ye dregs of baseness, vultures among men, / That tire upon the hearts of generous spirits.
- Thus made she her remove, / And left wrath tiring on her son.
- Upon that were my thoughts tiring .
Etymology 4
Noun
(en noun)- In posture to displode their second tire / Of thunder.