jail was clearly agitated by the constant bickering of her inlays.
The guest speaker seemed agitated when the audience did not quiet down right away.
It's wonderful that the family worshiped together, but their screaming infant agitated the entire congregation.
The Principal's calming words helped to settle the agitated student.
I wish Dad would not watch the news because it leaves him upset and agitated night after night.
uneasy is negative connotation
No, 'grand' is a very positive connotation.
Well the denotation is the exact meaning and the Connotation is the suggested idea which has to do with the word.
A full stomach of food makes people sedate and sometimes even sleepy. Few people want to fight after eating. To agitate means to irritate. So you can't irritate or agitate (most people) when they have a full stomach (though many families might argue that Thanksgiving get-togethers often produce family fights even with full stomachs).
It is positive. --- Actually, it can go either way in modern usage, though it has a better connotation than "stingy."
Don't agitate me!
Agitate is like when you get mad, so you could say : The kid says I agitate him.
The word agitated is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb agitate.
Loud noises agitate Angela so much that she cannot endure them.
"Agitate" in Tagalog can be translated as "panginginig" or "pagkabahala," both of which refer to causing someone to feel disturbed or anxious.
The noun forms for the verb to agitate are agitator, agitation, and the gerund, agitating.
Bother, annoy, and disturb are words. Those mean agitate.
agitate - to use inflammitory methods to irritate a responsive entity [eg. a person, a bacterium, etc.]"I attempted, unsuccessfully, to agitate her by intruding upon her personal space."
calm
regurgitate
The city was peaceful during the day, but demonstrators continued to agitate publicly throughout the night.
no, agitate is a verb