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[ UK /ˈæŋɡɹi/ ]
[ US /ˈæŋɡɹi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. severely inflamed and painful
    an angry sore
  2. (of the elements) as if showing violent anger
    furious winds
    angry clouds on the horizon
    the raging sea
  3. feeling or showing anger
    angry at the weather
    an angry silence
    angry customers
    sending angry letters to the papers

How To Use angry In A Sentence

  • In her house apron and with her hair a little ruffled she looked younger, startled and then angry. THE WHITE DOVE
  • In a second or three, take one high stakes football match, throw in that controversial miscall, stir it up with loads of angry fans, whisk in a few politicians, let it bake overnight and what you end up with is a tasty football ferrora (ph). CNN Transcript Nov 20, 2009
  • The angry audience shouted the speaker down.
  • Christie was involved in an angry bust-up with reporters and photographers outside the courtroom.
  • And it's weird, no one really gets angry at me for piking ... they just seem to look down on me, if you get what I mean. Stupid
  • If you're a consumer and you get spam from a "legitimate" company, call them up and let them know how angry you are.
  • Some looked angry, while others seemed more amused as some of the angriest protesters bellowed at them through a loudhailer.
  • The captain continues the bitter commentary for a moment before calming himself down, saying he knows that Jenko wouldn't have wanted them to get angry about his death, and himself would have "rapped" to them about balance in the cosmos "and some nonsense about karma. Tomato Nation
  • Ten days of frenzied reporting had not been stilled by increasingly angry Downing Street statements.
  • She hears nothing but the breeze rustling the curtains of her bedroom window, and the angry blare of the television coming from her father's bedroom.
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