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All beleaguer synonyms

be·lea·guer
B b

verb beleaguer

  • beset — If someone or something is beset by problems or fears, they have many problems or fears which affect them severely.
  • bedevil — If you are bedevilled by something unpleasant, it causes you a lot of problems over a period of time.
  • plague — French La Peste. a novel (1947) by Albert Camus.
  • annoy — If someone or something annoys you, it makes you fairly angry and impatient.
  • gnaw — to bite or chew on, especially persistently.
  • nag — to annoy by persistent faultfinding, complaints, or demands.
  • tease — to irritate or provoke with persistent petty distractions, trifling raillery, or other annoyance, often in sport.
  • bother — If you do not bother to do something or if you do not bother with it, you do not do it, consider it, or use it because you think it is unnecessary or because you are too lazy.
  • pester — to bother persistently with petty annoyances; trouble: Don't pester me with your trivial problems.
  • vex — to irritate; annoy; provoke: His noisy neighbors often vexed him.
  • blockade — A blockade of a place is an action that is taken to prevent goods or people from entering or leaving it.
  • persecute — to pursue with harassing or oppressive treatment, especially because of religious or political beliefs, ethnic or racial origin, gender identity, or sexual orientation.
  • storm — Theodore Woldsen [tey-aw-dawr vawlt-suh n] /ˈteɪ ɔˌdɔr ˈvɔlt sən/ (Show IPA), 1817–88, German poet and novelist.
  • harry — to harass, annoy, or prove a nuisance to by or as if by repeated attacks; worry: He was harried by constant doubts.
  • worry — to torment oneself with or suffer from disturbing thoughts; fret.
  • badger — A badger is a wild animal which has a white head with two wide black stripes on it. Badgers live underground and usually come up to feed at night.
  • put upon — imposed upon; ill-used.
  • set upon — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
  • siege — the act or process of surrounding and attacking a fortified place in such a way as to isolate it from help and supplies, for the purpose of lessening the resistance of the defenders and thereby making capture possible.
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