D defs.my
Entry 4 senses · 4 variants Webster, 1913

Chagrin

/shă'grĭn/ · Cha·grin · IPA /ʃəˈɡɹɪn/
01 n. Vexation; mortification.
  1. 1.
    Vexation; mortification.
    “I must own that I felt rather vexation and chagrin than hope and satisfaction.” — Richard Porson.
    “Hear me, and touch Belinda with chagrin.” Pope.
Syn. Vexation; mortification; peevishness; fretfulness; disgust; disquiet.
Chagrin, Vexation, Mortification. These words agree in the general sense of pain produced by untoward circumstances. Vexation is a feeling of disquietude or irritating uneasiness from numerous causes, such as losses, disappointments, etc. Mortification is a stronger word, and denotes that keen sense of pain which results from wounded pride or humiliating occurrences. Chagrin is literally the cutting pain produced by the friction of Shagreen leather; in its figurative sense, it varies in meaning, denoting in its lower degrees simply a state of vexation, and its higher degrees the keenest sense of mortification.
02 v. t. To excite ill-humor in; to vex; to mortify; as, he was not a little chagrined.
imp. & p. p. Chagrined; p. pr. & vb. n. Chargrining
  1. 1.
    To excite ill-humor in; to vex; to mortify; as, he was not a little chagrined.
03 v. i. To be vexed or annoyed.
  1. 1.
    To be vexed or annoyed.
04 a. Chagrined.
  1. 1.
    Chagrined.