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harried
[har-eed]
adjective
harassed, agitated, or troubled by or as if by repeated attacks; beleaguered.
This book is a balm for the harried, doubt-filled soul of a parent.
ravaged or devastated, as in war.
Since leaving France, the Fourth Battalion had depended for its food on what it could glean from a harried countryside.
verb
the simple past tense and past participle of harry.
Other 51Թ Forms
- unharried adjective
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of harried1
Example Sentences
For a decade, we were harried Los Angeles co-parents, entwined by conversations involving camp sign-ups, parent/teacher conferences, pediatrician appointments, dividing spring break weeks and the antidotes of two troublesome felines.
To hear business leaders tell it, their customers are frustrated: Instead of the human touch, patients get nothing at all, stymied by long wait times and harried, disempowered workers.
She’s already harried by trying to accomplish this enormous task while grieving at the same time, and a dog the size of a PT Cruiser isn’t helping that stress one bit.
“Snow White,” for instance, is coming at a time when many children will be on spring break, which means harried parents may be looking for things for their kids to do.
Hustled and harried and looking to all the world like they were preparing to plunge ever deeper into the bottomless pit of poor results.
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