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Definition of pester verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

pester

verb
 
/ˈpestə(r)/
 
/ˈpestər/
[transitive, intransitive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they pester
 
/ˈpestə(r)/
 
/ˈpestər/
he / she / it pesters
 
/ˈpestəz/
 
/ˈpestərz/
past simple pestered
 
/ˈpestəd/
 
/ˈpestərd/
past participle pestered
 
/ˈpestəd/
 
/ˈpestərd/
-ing form pestering
 
/ˈpestərɪŋ/
 
/ˈpestərɪŋ/
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  1. to annoy somebody, especially by asking them something many times synonym badger
    • pester somebody for something Journalists pestered neighbours for information.
    • pester somebody with something He has been pestering her with phone calls for over a week.
    • pester somebody/something The horses were continually pestered by flies.
    • pester (somebody to do something) The kids kept pestering me to read to them.
    Extra Examples
    • They kept pestering him for his autograph.
    • I knew he would keep pestering until he got an answer.
    • She would pester him until she got exactly what she wanted.
    • Stop pestering!
    • The kids kept pestering me to buy them ice creams.
    Word Originmid 16th cent. (in the senses ‘overcrowd (a place)’ and ‘impede (a person)’): from French empestrer ‘encumber’, influenced by pest. The current sense is an extension of an earlier use, ‘infest’, referring to vermin.
See pester in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

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