an·tag·o·nize (also antagonise British English) /ænˈtæɡənaɪz/ verb [transitiveT]
ANNOYto annoy someone very much by doing something that they do not like 使生气,引起…对抗[敌对]
Do not antagonize your customers.
不要惹恼顾客。
Examples from the Corpus
antagonize• I cravenly agreed, simply in order not to antagonize and perhaps lose him.• The White House does not want to antagonize Beijing.• The slogansantagonized his customers and often got him into ideological hot water.• It was done to antagonize, not to amuse.• Matt wasn't the sort of man to antagonize people.• You don't want to antagonizerich and powerfulEmissaries, especially not on their own ship in deep space.• The police departmentantagonizes the black community here on an almost regularbasis.• This is effective not because it lowersserumpotassiumconcentration but because it directly antagonizes the membrane depolarizing effect of hyperkalemia.• And Victor Amadeus could not afford to antagonize them too deeply, for fear of their power as a class.