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[ UK /mˈɪf/ ]
NOUN
  1. a state of irritation or annoyance
VERB
  1. cause to be annoyed
    His behavior really miffed me

How To Use miff In A Sentence

  • Why be all miffy and hissy and in a bitch-slapping mood guys, about not being in the military when you can do the work you like in prisons and police forces? See, it's not all about the election today.
  • I was a little miffed that we'd had such a poor fishing day. Times, Sunday Times
  • I think he was a bit miffed. Times, Sunday Times
  • No matter what ruling they ultimately emerge with, there are bound to be some very miffed clubs across the nation.
  • The restaurant in Miami was miffed, understandably. Times, Sunday Times
  • I am somewhat miffed that if I am ever to achieve this ambition, I will have to put up with rather too much of this idiot's writings.
  • Industry, while prepared to welcome any reduction, however small, in its current plight, was miffed.
  • There is a lovely variety of this species called _V.g. variegata_; in shape and habit it resembles the type though scarcely as vigorous, but not at all "miffy. Hardy Perennials and Old Fashioned Flowers Describing the Most Desirable Plants, for Borders, Rockeries, and Shrubberies.
  • I was miffed about that and would not have done it if I had known.
  • Immense amounts of money were squandered, reputations were tarnished, and the consumer was left, as is so often the case, chagrined, puzzled, shortchanged, miffed.
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