Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Simple past tense and past participle of
nark .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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He was seriously 'narked' by comments I had made in this blog, criticising the Council for wasting public money employing a private sleuth to investigate its own councillors about a 'leak'.
Archive 2007-04-01 Glyn Davies 2007
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He was seriously 'narked' by comments I had made in this blog, criticising the Council for wasting public money employing a private sleuth to investigate its own councillors about a 'leak'.
Powys put the 'frighteners' on Glyn Davies 2007
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Bolton finally get narked with that and Lee interecepts, sends Taylor free up the left and Reina has to punch the cross clear.
Bolton Wanderers v Liverpool - as it happened! Tom Bryant 2010
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I do have to admit though – I get thoroughly narked by the use of abbreviated speak and purposeful wrong spelling (like “huni”) just to look cool when there is plenty of room to use correct spelling.
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Even the chief of ITV was a bit narked off by the broadcast disturbance and called it “inexcusable”.
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Still, some Chinese people are awfully narked off about it, as The New York Times reports:
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Brendan is quite right that Voltaire was basically a Deist, and he would be right to be narked if I were to suggest that Catholicism is 'antithetical' to religion; but I would never argue anything so foolish.
MIND MELD: Is Science Fiction Antithetical to Religion? 2008
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Unsurprisingly people got narked at having their favourite online forum shut down with minimal warning.
Turner Tunes EliRabett 2010
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As per many published stories at the time, Skip believed that when White made his historic jaunt on June 3, 1965, the astronaut was subject to a condition known to scuba divers as being “narked,” or so one theory goes.
The Lampshade Mark Jacobson 2010
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Madame Trixy is getting a bit narked at the use by our media, particularly the BBC, of the phrase 'European Union' rather than 'Europe'.
Archive 2009-04-01 2009
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