[
UK
/ɪnfjˈɔːɹɪˌeɪtɪd/
]
[ US /ˌɪnˈfjʊɹiˌeɪtɪd, ɪnˈfjʊɹiˌeɪtɪd/ ]
[ US /ˌɪnˈfjʊɹiˌeɪtɪd, ɪnˈfjʊɹiˌeɪtɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
marked by extreme anger
infuriated onlookers charged the police who were beating the boy
a furious scowl
furious about the accident
could not control the maddened crowd
the enraged bull attached
How To Use infuriated In A Sentence
- 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
- The gesture infuriated him and he let out a stream of invective.
- But even her critics, infuriated by her indomitable chirpiness, admire her equally unquenchable energy.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- The new ruling has infuriated coach drivers, who now have nowhere to park.
- Punk and New Wave infuriated the boomers, because it was the first hint they were old.
- 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
- 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