1 Raskolnikov felt more and more irritated.
2 All this irritated Katerina Ivanovna intensely.
3 He returned home, twice as irritated and angry as before.
4 and how that irritated you and worked in with your illness.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 5 calamity, morally, in a way, by irritation or something of the sort.
6 But soon these new pleasant sensations passed into morbid irritability.
7 That was the second mistake he had made in temper, through impulsiveness and irritability.
8 "I am surprised at your putting the question like that," said Luzhin, getting more and more irritated.
9 know also, he added, feeling angry at once at having made this addition and more irritated at his anger.
10 And perhaps, he was irritated at having no facts, and blurted it out in his vexation--or perhaps he has some plan.
11 Irritated that my mother and sister were unwilling to quarrel with me at his insinuations, he gradually began being unpardonably rude to them.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 5: CHAPTER III 12 But Dounia did not notice this peculiar excitement, she was so irritated by his remark that she was frightened of him like a child and that he was so terrible to her.
13 Add to that, nervous irritability from hunger, from lodging in a hole, from rags, from a vivid sense of the charm of his social position and his sister's and mother's position too.
14 He had got completely away from everyone, like a tortoise in its shell, and even the sight of a servant girl who had to wait upon him and looked sometimes into his room made him writhe with nervous irritation.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 15 Katerina Ivanovna was irritated too by the fact that hardly any of the lodgers invited had come to the funeral, except the Pole who had just managed to run into the cemetery, while to the memorial dinner the poorest and most insignificant of them had turned up, the wretched creatures, many of them not quite sober.
16 I will not attempt to describe how Razumihin went back to the ladies, how he soothed them, how he protested that Rodya needed rest in his illness, protested that Rodya was sure to come, that he would come every day, that he was very, very much upset, that he must not be irritated, that he, Razumihin, would watch over him, would get him a doctor, the best doctor, a consultation.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 4: CHAPTER III 17 He was particularly irritated by the owner of the flat which had been taken in view of his approaching marriage and was being redecorated at his own expense; the owner, a rich German tradesman, would not entertain the idea of breaking the contract which had just been signed and insisted on the full forfeit money, though Pyotr Petrovitch would be giving him back the flat practically redecorated.
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