Irritableness
ir·ri·ta·ble
I0241900 (ĭr′ĭ-tə-bəl)Irritableness
See Also: ANGER, NERVOUSNESS, TENSION
- Annoying as bird droppings on your windowshield —Elyse Sommer
- Bitter exasperation tightened like a knot in Mr. Casper’s mind —William Styron
- Bristling like a panther —Victor Hugo
- Cross as a sitting hen —American Colloquialism, attributed to New England
- Cross as nine highways —John Ray’s Proverbs
- Cross as two sticks —Sir Walter Scott
- Cross … like a beautiful face upon which some one has sat down by mistake —Victor Hugo
- Disgust like powder clotted my nose —Cynthia Ozick
- Disturbing as a gnat trapped and mucking about in the inner chamber of his ear —John Yount
- Disturbing as decay in a carcass —Julia O’Faolain
- Excitable … like a stick of dynamite just waiting for somebody to come along and light your fuse —David Huddle
- Feel feisty, like a galloping colt on a Mediterranean hillside —Tony Ardizzone
In the novel from which this is taken, The Heart of the Order, the narrator’s irritability is caused by having his name shortened.
- Feeling ornery as a bunkhouse cook —Richard Ford
- Felt irritably ashamed, like a middle-aged man recalling last night’s party, and his unseemly capers and his pawing of the host’s wife —Wallace Stegner
- Gnaws like a silent poison —George Santyana
- Gruff as a billy goat —Mary Hedin
- Her grumpiness, her irritability, her crotchets are like static that, from time to time, give way to a clear signal, just as you often hit a pure band of music on a car radio after turning the dial through a lot of chaotic squawk —Laurie Colwin
- Irritable like a hedgehog rolled up the wrong way, tormenting himself with his own prickles —Thomas Hood
The prickly hedgehog is a favorite image for describing irritability. A shorter variation of the above by Tolstoy is “Bristly … like a hedgehog.” Expanded versions include “The man who rises in the morning with his feelings all bristling like the quills of a hedge-hog, simply needs to be knocked down” (Josiah Gilbert Holland) and “An irritable man is like a hedgehog rolled up the wrong way, tormenting himself with his own prickles” (Thomas Hood).
- Irritated as a young stag is irritated by the velvet on his antlers —Rumer Godden
- (All the mistakes of my misspent little life came down to) irritate me like so many grains of pepper —Gerald Kersh
- Irritating as a coughing fit during a play —Anon
- Irritating as a fly that keeps buzzing around your head —Anon
- Irritating as one sock or an odd glove —Helen Hudson
See Also: USELESSNESS
- Irritating, like a dish of ‘chulent’ to an old man’s gut —Stephen Longstreet
’Chulent’ is a Jewish dish of meat, beans, onions. Obviously this is the type of comparison that could easily be modified to be more meaningful to other groups; for example, “Irritating, like a dish of hot chili.”
- Irritating like a gun that hangs fire —Joseph Conrad
- A minor nuisance, like having a tooth filled —Richard Connell
- Prickly as thistles —Lawrence Durrell
- Sizzle and splatter like batter in a pan —line from British television series “Bergerac,” broadcast June 1987
- Snappish as a junkyard dog —Robert Campbell
- Sulk, like an old man whose son had failed to make varsity —Clancy Sigal
- Tempers snapping like rubber bands —Anon, WNYC, Public Radio March 28, 1987
- Troublesome as a lawsuit —Colley Cibber