English language

How to pronounce enrage in English?

Toggle Transcript
Type Words
Type of anger
Derivation enragement

Examples of enrage

enrage
Opposition forces fear his death in combat would enrage his volatile supporters.
From the latimes.com
Forget about all those meetings with Wall Street powers that so enrage the left.
From the theatlantic.com
Both men did enough to fire up their own supporters and enrage their opponent's.
From the economist.com
Political power has forced the party to make compromises that enrage ideologues.
From the economist.com
It will enrage the flame-throwing phandroids, but the truth often does, so oh well.
From the techcrunch.com
His thesis may enrage, amuse or inspire, depending on your ideology and your wallet.
From the usatoday.com
While such situations enrage many, they can be hard to avoid, given market dynamics.
From the businessweek.com
Attempts to increase drink duty normally enrage the struggling pub industry.
From the economist.com
Tonight's Panorama will surely enrage the notoriously touchy Barclay boys.
From the guardian.co.uk
More examples
  • Put into a rage; make violently angry
  • (enraged) angered: marked by extreme anger; "the enraged bull attached"; "furious about the accident"; "a furious scowl"; "infuriated onlookers charged the police who were beating the boy"; "could not control the maddened crowd"
  • (enragement) infuriation: a feeling of intense anger
  • Jaques RouxnThu00E9ophile Leclerc
  • (Enraged) In psychiatry, rage is a mental state that is one extreme of the intensity spectrum of anger. When a person experiences rage it usually lasts until a threat is removed or the person under rage is incapacitated. The other end of the spectrum is annoyance (DiGiuseppe & Tafrate, 2006). ...
  • To fill with rage; to provoke to frenzy or madness; to make furious
  • (enraged) Angered, made furious, made full of rage
  • (Enraged) In a leaping posture. It is sometimes used to describe the position of a horse which in the case of other animals would be saliant.