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How To Use Infuriate In A Sentence

  • But the move has infuriated many servicewomen. The Sun
  • Chip Caray infuriated a lot of baseball fans this October on TBS, sparking jokes as he described seemingly every hit as "fisted," and completely botching a call in the 10th inning of the AL Central one-game playoff, when he screamed, "Line drive, base hit!" on a screamer by Nick Punto that Tigers left fielder Ryan Raburn caught before throwing home to nail Alexi Casilla at the plate and keep the game going. NY Daily News
  • The various protest groups are infuriated over what they call their holding pen, a fenced in area across the street from the Fleet Center. CNN Transcript Jul 24, 2004
  • Having immersed myself in his life, it infuriates me that the man behind some of the greatest films ever made should have been reduced to this awkward, exiled and in some ways grotesque figure.
  • I could tell that my refusal to allow him to ruffle me infuriated him. FOLLOW THE SHARKS
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  • I was absolutely infuriated with him.
  • Don't make yourself look at what infuriates you.
  • I know he read my column at least once because it so infuriated him, but did he read it again before he put forth his animadversions
  • In my two practices I had already learned that nothing infuriated Candy more than a spiritless cheerleader.
  • While car criminals infuriate Fry he is as angry with receivers of stolen goods.
  • And it has particularly infuriated park managers because the owner of an Alsatian watched as her dog chased the buck and then fled the scene while the deer died.
  • He looked very much like a savage creature, with his wild, shaggy black hair and infuriated and crazed grin.
  • The more complicated your life gets, the more people you interact with on a daily basis, the more incidents occur that can irritate, annoy, incense, madden, infuriate and enrage.
  • In contrast to his vigour and emotional buoyancy later in seeing off the so-called fuel blockade, this dark episode was equally to infuriate, exhaust and exasperate the First Minister.
  • That gentleman bellowed in an infuriated manner.
  • Philip was a serial philanderer who did not bother to conduct his affairs very discreetly, which infuriated the moody and jealous Joan.
  • Jimmy's presence had infuriated Hugh.
  • His lack of moral fibre and intellectual courage are two of his shortcomings that infuriate the most.
  • But while White's words are designed to boost his own players rather than infuriate the opposition, it could be argued that his talkativeness may create extra pressure for his team.
  • And the fact that women anywhere are willing to dignify such baboonery with a response infuriates me. What's That Got To Do With the Price of an Intact Hymen in China?
  • It kind of infuriates me that emergency workers are going to risk their lives trying to save people who don't want to be saved. BTDF
  • It would infuriate his father more than almost anything else. DESPERADOES
  • On a much smaller scale, the writer of the opinion column in my local paper talks bull every week, completely contradicting the factual articles sharing the page, which infuriates me.
  • The President was infuriated that government efforts to eradicate poverty and improve livelihoods were undermined by what he called cancerous corruption that had eaten into government departments. New Vision Frontpage News
  • This helps to explain why pintails, mallards, and other ducks landed on farms and infuriated farmers in the Klamath Basin during the summer of 1946.
  • The hostile bid has infuriated board members of the Dowty group, who claim that their company is being underpriced.
  • One school in Florida didn't have an accredited undergrad program, which infuriated students who wanted to pursue an MBA, so they developed their own unaccredited MBA program.
  • The actress tells of how she was so infuriated by the letter that she wrote a reply, castigating the woman for assuming she knew her parents' beliefs better than she did.
  • If anything infuriates me it's this fake morale-boosting stuff.
  • Infuriated residents watched on helplessly as lorry loads of human waste sludge was dumped within 40 metres of their homes last weekend.
  • This is not a book for the history specialist, who may be mildly infuriated by the shallow treatment of pet subjects.
  • They infuriated our mothers' sensibilities and wallets with inane lifestyles and myriad accessories.
  • This may infuriate his base, but to win back independents he has to govern from the center. Obama Is Dealt a Tough Hand
  • Infuriated with this reply, Lear divides her portion between his other daughters, with the condition that himself with 100 knights shall be maintained by each daughter in turn.
  • Many are even infuriated and feel affronted by these results.
  • I was angered, nay, infuriated, by your review of the movie.
  • I gaped at her, stuck between being infuriated and revolted.
  • Is it any wonder I am infuriated by smug, self-righteous politicians who know nothing about country life yet want to abolish hunting with hounds?
  • I was infuriated at being restrained like this, and absolutely livid that they had taken Gabriel away… maybe even killed him.
  • It is the arrogant and totally unearned presumption of smug superiority that infuriated people.
  • This had so infuriated Moustaine that he had decided to punish them, which meant the rest of us as well.
  • John McCain infuriates me at times as much as the next guy, but if he isn’t this: These ‘I regret my 2008 vote’ pieces are going to be excruciating… | RedState
  • The word livid has so long been associated with anger that it has lost its coloration and now means “infuriated.” The Right Word in the Right Place at the Right Time
  • But before sternway could be got on the boat, the infuriated monster made a sudden turn, dashed upon and stove it into fragments. The Von Toodleburgs Or, The History of a Very Distinguished Family
  • But such an action would have little effect other than to infuriate China and invite retaliation.
  • I remember being infuriated by the injustice and lack of logic.
  • The suggestion that rural communities in Scotland will lose out in the broadband revolution infuriates him.
  • You know, it just really infuriates me to think that this is still an issue for me at the age of 36!
  • For his wages the Dutchman needs to have a much more significant influence on the team display - occasional flashes of excellence only serve to infuriate even more.
  • The division between the first and the second half is marked by a disconcerting jolt in the flow of the film, and the ambiguous ending may infuriate.
  • While these guys are in the 82nd Airborne, you can see that what they write is sure to infuriate the patriots in the 101st Chairborne.
  • Infuriated by this, the latter plunged left and right, laying about madly with his club.
  • He beguiles his friends and infuriates his enemies, to the point where they can hardly mention his name.
  • People infuriated by what they call a discriminatory ban on photography by one of Italian fashion label Dolce & Gabbana's Hong Kong outlets have protested outside the store. The Seattle Times
  • The Greek government's sustained veto over recognition of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia infuriated its partners.
  • Infuriated by what he calls a treacherous and unacceptable provocation from the diplomatic mission, Cuban communist leader, Fidel Castro began building his response a few days later. CNN Transcript Feb 6, 2006
  • But her natural grace seemed to infuriate Salmelu rather than soothe him. THE LIGHTSTONE: BOOK ONE, PART ONE OF THE EA CYCLE
  • There is an episode of The Simpsons in which Homer becomes so infuriated with the FOX-TV logo in the corner of his screen that he reaches out, grabs the logo and stomps on it.
  • And the "Hockeytown" moniker infuriates just about everyone who isn't a Wings fan. USATODAY.com - There's nothing like World Cup soccer action
  • What gets under our skin, aggravates, infuriates, frustrates and makes us hate is of the same seed that also begets love and divine revelation.
  • That anyone would find his lousy play any good infuriates him.
  • In light of its vast market power, Wal-Mart has infuriated the media with its long-standing refusal to stock obscene CDs and racy magazines.
  • His embrace of the doctrine of zero tolerance, however, infuriates liberals.
  • But the to-ing-and-fro-ing will infuriate her performers who rely on their mentors to coach them. The Sun
  • Something about crows, yes, poor fellows, blow them off too, for now, so infuriated, they know the August blacksmith bellows to be a far cry; or November, pinhole in a parallax of sty, cataract, red-flecked polyp spitting flumes of snow. The Last Words Of Julius Orange
  • The plans have infuriated parents, who have vowed to fight for the unit where dozens of lives are saved each year.
  • Without being asked about McNaughton he volunteered the unprompted observation that he had been ‘nervous’, a remark which so infuriated Aberdeen they complained to the SFA on Thursday.
  • Sometimes it's the Republicans who infuriate you and sometimes it's the Democrats whose bone-headed nitwittery is singularly depressing. Harry Reid: Pretend Stupid or Truly Stupid?
  • What infuriates Raymond, inspires his rage, is not really that I committed this crime.
  • The airlines know full well that we are puzzled by the frantic pricing and repricing that they do - puzzled, that is, when we aren't infuriated.
  • It infuriates me that she was not found guilty.
  • infuriated onlookers charged the police who were beating the boy
  • Columnist Max Castro writes in today's Miami Herald about one double standard that is of a type that "infuriates" other nations:On Tuesday, the United States gave its blessing to a program -- known in bureaucratic doublespeak as the ''Airbridge Denial Program'' -- that allows Colombian fighter pilots to shoot down unarmed civilian aircraft suspected of carrying drugs. Archive 2003-08-01
  • That would be the only graceful way to bow out of Clayton's, the only way not to infuriate Andrew McClintock. THE AMBASSADOR'S WOMEN
  • But her natural grace seemed to infuriate Salmelu rather than soothe him. THE LIGHTSTONE: BOOK ONE, PART ONE OF THE EA CYCLE
  • His father sent Bob and Chris cables describing the madness of the crisis: the RAF bombed his office and hit the church next door killing the verger, just one of a "series of catastrophic mistakes" that infuriated and shocked the family. Christopher Hampton: My Egyptian paradise
  • She was infuriated by his presumption in making the travel arrangements without first consulting her.
  • I may not agree with you or you with me, but my God, reading your posts just infuriates me. Think Progress » Uninformed Limbaugh Wonders ‘Where Was The Union’ At Non-Union Mine Disaster
  • What infuriates me is the undervaluing of the sort of help which keeps older women reasonably fit - physiotherapy, chiropody, check-ups and so on.
  • It infuriated her that in their old age they should suddenly have become the target of malice -- unexpected, hurtful malice. DOUBLE DECEIT
  • She said it harshly and in anger, and then lapsed into infuriated silence.
  • It would infuriate his father more than almost anything else. DESPERADOES
  • What really, really infuriates is that I’m almost certainly paying for them. Outward Facing Strapline « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • The gesture infuriated him and he let out a stream of invective.
  • That would be the only graceful way to bow out of Clayton's, the only way not to infuriate Andrew McClintock. THE AMBASSADOR'S WOMEN
  • He beguiles his friends and infuriates his enemies, to the point where they can hardly mention his name.
  • The small dragon was sitting on the bed and lashing her tail as if she was infuriated.
  • But his brilliance was often offset by his erraticism, and this erraticism infuriated her.
  • This is admittedly a nonpersonal sense of 'infer', but the usage still infuriates language sticklers. Times, Sunday Times
  • It saddens me -- "infuriates" is perhaps a better word -- when Republicans take sole ownership of the U.S. Dorian de Wind: Ramblings of a 'Fake American'
  • It usually infuriates me when people say that writers are just "looking for copy", because it is very rarely the case, but the idea skipped disloyally through my mind for one uncomfortable moment. With the Kisses of His Mouth by Monique Roffey – review
  • While the personal and sexual relationships that derived from this situation infuriated German and Austrian men, it took a while for them to launch their sexual counter-revolution.
  • The various protest groups are infuriated over what they call their holding pen, a fenced-in area across the street from the FleetCenter. CNN Transcript Jul 23, 2004
  • But the protective tariff infuriated the predominantly agricultural South.
  • We can become enraged at schoolchildren who want to hold onto their babyishness, in much the same way as we are infuriated by prolonged breastfeeding.
  • If there is anything that infuriates me, it is being ignored or dismissed.
  • It is amazing how the very same Egyptians who wereinfuriated over Switzerland's decisionto ban building minarets are the same people who demolished theMagen Abrahamsynagogue in Egypt. Egypt: Synagogue Gone ... Synagone
  • Decent people are routinely infuriated, intimidated and frightened by the boorish minority - and that is why it has become such a huge political issue.
  • Amy Winehouse infuriates her father Mitch with plans to 'remarry' her ex-husband Blake Fielder-Civil news that would leave any caring father seething with anger. WN.com - Articles related to Amy Winehouse to marry ex-husband in Caribbean island
  • What infuriates me most and makes me wish for a second TV at my place is the choice of ‘celebrities’ to take part in this jumble sale of food.
  • The dresser drawer stuck when I pulled it open, and the small thing seemed to infuriate me.
  • For example, we learn that Milton's three daughters did not, as legend has it, serve as adoring amanuenses to the blind poet when he was writing "Paradise Lost" but instead were illiterates whose rebellious behavior so infuriated their father that he left them nothing in his will. A Sleuth Goes to the Library
  • It infuriates him that they've decided to come in and say untruths about him.
  • He may have thought that going to the police would only infuriate Charlie Benson further. WHISTLER IN THE DARK
  • - 'Terror factory' tag infuriates Azamgarh's Sanjarpur The Telegraph - Calcutta (Kolkata) - Frontpage
  • He was particularly infuriated by a statement of support from lecturers at Goldsmiths: "I can imagine what they would say were a group from the TaxPayers' Alliance to turn up at their homes and vandalise them in protest at the way these lecturers are leeching the taxpayer and failing to discipline their students. Cribsheet daily 16.11.10
  • Punk and New Wave infuriated the boomers, because it was the first hint they were old.
  • The new ruling has infuriated coach drivers, who now have nowhere to park.
  • It infuriates me that people cause so much mindless damage, which costs the car owners a small fortune.
  • Traders at Thursday's meeting were infuriated by what they described as the condescending attitude of the council's deputy leader and its director of planning.
  • I played this game with a number of friends, including a few professional singers, and even they became infuriated that they were scoring low marks with songs they knew by heart.
  • While the personal and sexual relationships that derived from this situation infuriated German and Austrian men, it took a while for them to launch their sexual counter-revolution.
  • But even her critics, infuriated by her indomitable chirpiness, admire her equally unquenchable energy.
  • The gesture infuriated him and he let out a stream of invective.
  • Of course, one of the women was also cheating on her lover with a man, which so infuriated her lover that it resulted in one woman killing the other in a jealous rage.
  • The whole thing infuriates me because whoever was in charge of the creative copy for this ad series was taking the easy way out, and didn't bother thinking it through completely.
  • His lack of moral fibre and intellectual courage are two of his shortcomings that infuriate the most.
  • He has survived his ordeal by adopting the precepts of Zen/Confucianism, and he infuriates his colleagues by making gnomish comments. Result! « We Don't Count Your Own Visits To Your Blog
  • But her natural grace seemed to infuriate Salmelu rather than soothe him. THE LIGHTSTONE: BOOK ONE, PART ONE OF THE EA CYCLE
  • And on the days when I say something that angers and infuriates you, tell me!
  • his victimization infuriated him
  • While car criminals infuriate Fry he is as angry with receivers of stolen goods.
  • His boldness and clarity infuriates opponents - academe is crowded with critics who have made twerps of themselves taking him on.
  • P.D. says: biz@62, It just infuriates me how the Religious Right gave her a free pass. Think Progress » Fox News Televangelist Hume: Tiger Would Be ‘Farther Down The Road’ To ‘Forgiveness’ With Christianity
  • The article that Dan talks about here just infuriates me.
  • She antagonised her civil servants, infuriated her leaders, insulted colleagues.
  • Their timing infuriated me, because communities last longer than political administrations.
  • This perpetuation of the idea that mental illness is less legitimate than physical illness absolutely infuriates me.
  • I have always found this upsetting as an environmentalist, just as the current scandal infuriates me as a typographer.
  • I was infuriated by / with their constant criticism.
  • For America's beleaguered liberals, Monday's New York Times reports what sounds like a dream come true: Fox News is considering parting company with Glenn Beck, the rococo conspiracy theorist who inspires those on the swivel-eyed right and infuriates anyone to their left. Glenn Beck's future at Fox News under threat | Richard Adams
  • The infuriated Abbot put forward a test case by sending a monk with a wagonload of corn across the bridge.
  • The level of ignorance this question represents infuriates me.
  • Sometimes it infuriates me when I cannot work on anything, cause my brain is frizzled. Creative Every Day, Part 10: The Grumpy Version « Looking for Roots
  • He wasn't much; but he was here, and her impotence to prevent his going infuriated her. DEATH AND TRANSFIGURATION
  • That would be the only graceful way to bow out of Clayton's, the only way not to infuriate Andrew McClintock. THE AMBASSADOR'S WOMEN
  • He may have thought that going to the police would only infuriate Charlie Benson further. WHISTLER IN THE DARK
  • Rard had his hands clenched into fists and he was infuriated.
  • I am obviously not a football fan, but it infuriates me to see all these people who think that just because a man has money he should give it willingly to anyone who asks for it.
  • It would infuriate his father more than almost anything else. DESPERADOES
  • Nameless is infuriated that Claverhouse, whose very name is hateful and ridiculous, is always happy, optimistic, cheerful, always laughing his annoying, Gargantuan, laugh ( "his plaguey cachinnations"). “. . .all his race rose up before him in a mighty phantasmagoria. . .”
  • Stokowski proposed a repeat recording but infuriated him by making cuts in an attempt to squeeze the music onto four records.
  • He annoys me and infuriates me but he also kind of intrigues me.
  • What infuriates me is the undervaluing of the sort of help which keeps older women reasonably fit - physiotherapy, chiropody, check-ups and so on.
  • It infuriates us to have to deal with this particular mayor.
  • Batsmen are infuriated when they are given out wrongly, but do not reverse incorrect decisions which work the other way around.
  • This infuriated some institutional shareholders and they allied with Walt Disney's nephew, who wanted to get rid of Eisner.
  • This infuriated the quick-tempered king. Christianity Today
  • The situation mirrors 1996, when workers infuriated residents by trimming a patch of grass around the sign - after they added four feet to the height of the sign rather than get the mower out.
  • I was infuriated by / with their constant criticism.
  • The July arrest infuriated Mr. Marrow who became famous in the 1990s largely because of his antipolice music who posted a video on the Internet days after to vent to fans about the experience and the police officer who ticketed him. Ice-T Arrest Melts on Error
  • That infuriated the Roma stars and set the scene for a crazy last 10 minutes which culminated in Tommasi's early exit.
  • That didn't matter, though, as the infuriated lord proceeded to splutter his way through a listing of the problems.
  • It's irritating from a normal "Ugh, and I waste my time on this?!" standpoint, baffles me from a "And yet people believe this myth be true enough times to make it worth the scammer's while" perspective and infuriates me from a "And I pay someone to sift through these emails?!" view. Archive 2007-03-01
  • Harper's Wyatt Mason often infuriates me, which I reckon is altogether one of the best reasons to read literary criticism. Archive 2008-12-01
  • A+s who wakes each day with an outer-directed sense of purpose and Just-Do-It-ness that leaves Nike in the dust, and that infuriates some and leaves others standing slack-jawed at my speed, control and efficiency. Jamie Lee Curtis: Nothing to Undo?
  • Massa was infuriated after Panis had driven so tardily on his slowing-down lap that he baulked the Brazilian, costing him a likely ninth place on the grid.
  • The hostile bid has infuriated board members of the Dowty group, who claim that their company is being underpriced.
  • Henry III infuriated the barons by favouring foreigners over his own nobility.
  • His speech was impassioned but it only managed to infuriate me more.
  • He may have thought that going to the police would only infuriate Charlie Benson further. WHISTLER IN THE DARK

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