[
US
/ˌɪnˈfjʊɹiˌeɪtɪŋ/
]
[ UK /ɪnfjˈɔːɹɪˌeɪtɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /ɪnfjˈɔːɹɪˌeɪtɪŋ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
extremely annoying or displeasing
his cavelier curtness of manner was exasperating
I've had an exasperating day
her infuriating indifference
the ceaseless tumult of the jukebox was maddening
How To Use infuriating In A Sentence
- It is quite absurd, not to mention infuriating, to have some moron from Sky burbling on about the next attraction when one has not had time to absorb the emotion from the film one has just seen.
- The whole area of politics and campaigning is infuriating at times.
- It was an infuriating trait, and it made her blood boil every time he came near.
- That," said Sethos, with a fair imitation of his infuriating smile," is what comes of having a reputation for omniscience. LORD OF THE SILENT
- An infuriatingly gooey-wooey silly-billy lovey-wovey couple. Times, Sunday Times
- While he is always friendly, even jovial in a blokeish high-fiving way (his English having got better as my French gets worse) he tends to be infuriatingly circumspect and diplomatic.
- While there is no question that his verbiage is infuriating at times, I think it's a mistake to see him as nothing but an anarchic, anti-rationalist nihilist.
- It was the uncertainty that was so infuriating, not knowing where she was.
- To actually go and try to find it can be infuriating and virtually impossible.
- Even more infuriating are the self-righteous hypocrites who claim to speak for a superior moral majority.