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roiled

[ US /ˈɹɔɪɫd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. aroused to impatience or anger
    made an irritated gesture
    feeling nettled from the constant teasing
    felt really pissed at her snootiness
    peeved about being left out
    roiled by the delay
    riled no end by his lies
  2. (of a liquid) agitated vigorously; in a state of turbulence
    the river's roiling current
    turbulent rapids

How To Use roiled In A Sentence

  • The National team is currently embroiled in an exhibition tour in B.C. versus Japan.
  • We've been having a great deal of difficulty educating our fliers that when wearing their flight suits, their sleeves must be roiled down to the wrist at all times.
  • The National team is currently embroiled in an exhibition tour in B.C. versus Japan.
  • The adults' menu may feature grilled shrimp, charbroiled chicken, sautéed vegetables, and salads galore.
  • A catapult fired point-blank, and flames broke over the roiled water, but it was pointless.
  • The seas roiled , tossing the ships in the harbor about like toys in a rain barrel.
  • Just then Edward handed Doctor Instow a goodly rasher of broiled ham, upon which was a perfectly poached egg; and directly after the man came round behind Jack, and quietly placed before him, with a whisper of warning that the plate was very hot, another rasher of ham, and at the first sight of it the lad began to shrink, but at the second glance, consequent upon a brave desire not to show his repugnance, he saw that it was a different kind of rasher to the doctor's, and that there was no egg. Jack at Sea All Work and no Play made him a Dull Boy
  • Unfortunately for both, their careers took a nosedive after they both became embroiled in controversy.
  • Gosh, it's over a year since I read The Moving Toyshop; here Gervase Fen is embroiled in a mystery of murder and espionage in a West Country cathedral town in about 1940. January Books 27) Holy Disorders, by Edmund Crispin
  • Choose grilled, baked or broiled foods instead of fried.
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