˜yÐÄvlog

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plaguesome

[ pleyg-suhm ]

adjective

  1. vexatious or troublesome.


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Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms

  • ±è±ô²¹²µ³Ü±ðs´Ç³¾±ð·²Ô±ð²õ²õ noun
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of plaguesome1

First recorded in 1820–30; plague + -some 1
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Navy's softspoken, sensitive Commodore Ben Wyatt might well have wondered why progress had to sacrifice this lovely coral atoll, instead of an empty wasteland, a dismal slum or a plaguesome Buchenwald.

Lady Anna,—who could think but little of her birth,—to whom it had been throughout her life a thing plaguesome rather than profitable,—could remember only what she had been in Cumberland, and her binding obligation to the tailor's son.

From

"Ye plaguesome brat!" cried Auntie; "there has Betty been seekin' ye, and I hae been seekin' ye, far an' near, i' the verra rottan-holes; an' here ye are, on yer ain father's buryin' day, that comes but ance—takin' up wi' a coo."

From

Instead of getting steadier, he grows more plaguesome.

From

That plaguesome Polypheme was Captain Stubbard, begirt with a wife, and endowed with a family almost in excess of benediction, and dancing attendance upon Miss Dolly, too stoutly for his own comfort, in the hope of procuring for his own Penates something to eat and to sit upon.

From

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