infuriated 的 2 个定义
in·fu·ri·at·ed, in·fu·ri·at·ing.
- to make furious; enrage.
- Archaic. infuriated.
infuriated 近义词
furious
更多infuriated例句
- Spend a couple hours reading bike Twitter, and you’re guaranteed to wind up despondent, infuriated, and profoundly disgusted with humanity.
- The nurse said she was shaken by the distress of the residents, and infuriated by the understaffing and emphasis on cutting costs at the nursing homes she visited.
- Their continued negotiations infuriated some Senate Republicans, who complained that Mnuchin was caving to Democrats’ demands.
- Politics, she has often argued, has nothing to do with her position, and suggestions to the contrary can infuriate her.
- The applications infuriated several Senegalese fisheries stakeholders, including artisanal fishermen, industrial shipowners and civil society organizations.
- Indeed, once the fire-engine house was taken, everybody seemed impressed by John Brown, rather than infuriated or vengeful.
- This infuriated his grandfather, who cursed Barry and never spoke to him again.
- No one will be more infuriated by the comparison to socialism than the conservative-leaning members of the military.
- Prince Albert is reportedly infuriated with the way his father, Prince Rainier, is depicted in the film, as well as other details.
- The Germans, infuriated, then told Siilasvuo to hand Skurnik over for punishment, but he refused.
- What chiefly infuriated him was that the insult should come from one whom he considered a "greaser," a man of inferior race.
- With this, an all-overpowering rush was made, and Walker was carried off up the rock in the middle of five hundred infuriated men.
- He was a short, thickset man with white side whiskers, and looked like an infuriated Santa Claus, for he was covered with snow.
- The rider, naturally infuriated at this, struck the man with his whip so heavily that he fell down dead.
- Infuriated by the success of their foes, they fought valiantly to regain possession of the ponies.