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seething

[ UK /sˈiːðɪŋ/ ]
[ US /ˈsiðɪŋ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. in constant agitation
    a seething flag-waving crowd filled the streets
    a seething mass of maggots
    lovers and madmen have such seething brains

How To Use seething In A Sentence

  • But emotional ferment still seething from his betrayed boyhood keeps his body churning with unruly symptoms. Times, Sunday Times
  • We may still be able to save Las Vegas, as it is encysted by libertarian Nevada... but San Francisco, I fear, is already seething with the RED VIRUS, which has spread to it's outer "Bay Area" provinces, such as Mountain View and other Silicon Valley cities. Obama's Commie Mama
  • The seething sense of unfairness is almost palpable. Times, Sunday Times
  • I sauntered past, my eyes on that seething face. Times, Sunday Times
  • Did it leave me seething with anger? Times, Sunday Times
  • He can turn the state of lonely self-loathing into a veritable inferno of seething threats, fans, mockers, competitors.
  • Sturges was also quick to spot the feral intensity of Lee Marvin and Ernest Borgnine's brutal boorishness, using them to give Bad Day At Black Rock its seething core of twisted hatred.
  • Seething, she planned to make a midnight visit to his own regimented acres at dead of night later in the summer. SANDS OF TIME
  • CROWLEY: Some on the Bush team were described as seething when they saw the Gore camp release those partial figures out in public. CNN Transcript - Special Event: The Florida Vote: U.S. Supreme Court Turns Tables on Gore - December 09, 2000
  • The bar is a seething mass of bodies writhing to the disorienting beat.
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