ire 的定义
- intense anger; wrath.
ire 近义词
anger
更多ire例句
- Critics have implied, without evidence, that Samuelson is in the pocket of Google, but may also hold a special ire for her role leading the Authors Alliance, a group of writers who disavow the more hardline stance of the New York-based Authors Guild.
- The Titans gathered, standing on the Ravens logo at midfield at M&T Bank Stadium and drawing the attention and ire of Ravens Coach John Harbaugh.
- She attracted the administration’s ire with her blunt assessments in media interviews.
- Weber, for instance, has drawn police unions’ ire throughout her tenure in the Capitol after passing numerous reform laws.
- In August, California carried out its first rotating blackouts since the 2001 energy crisis, drawing the ire of millions who went powerless amid extreme temperatures.
- This time, he drew ire by going after the workers who have even fewer protections: those who make minimum wage.
- Later, the curriculum attracted the ire of tea party conservatives, and quickly became a cause celébre for Republicans.
- Dinosaurs like Donald Sterling draw the ire of Americans, regardless of political affiliation or ideological tilt.
- In choosing to extend her pin up brand into the territory of the sacred mother, she has wandered into a storm of feminist ire.
- Enter Indiegogo, whose dubious campaigns have earned it ire from creators and backers alike.
- These stops greatly excited the ire of Berlioz, who declaims against them in his celebrated work on orchestration.
- The F. text has une vielle irese, and M. Mon explains irese by angry, or full of ire.
- Hence, a note in Bell suggests that irish here means 'full of ire.'
- The low nature and character of the two boys rouses Bruno's ire, and he constantly flies into a rage when he is with them.
- The taunts and jeers thrown out are calculated to stir up ire and ill-feeling; I shall pass them by with disregard.