| irate | | |
| adj. | 1. irate, ireful | feeling or showing extreme anger.; "irate protesters"; "ireful words" |
| ~ angry | feeling or showing anger.; "angry at the weather"; "angry customers"; "an angry silence"; "sending angry letters to the papers" |
| mad | | |
| adj. | 1. huffy, mad, sore | roused to anger.; "stayed huffy a good while"; "she gets mad when you wake her up so early"; "mad at his friend"; "sore over a remark" |
| ~ colloquialism | a colloquial expression; characteristic of spoken or written communication that seeks to imitate informal speech. |
| ~ angry | feeling or showing anger.; "angry at the weather"; "angry customers"; "an angry silence"; "sending angry letters to the papers" |
| adj. | 2. brainsick, crazy, demented, disturbed, mad, sick, unbalanced, unhinged | affected with madness or insanity.; "a man who had gone mad" |
| ~ insane | afflicted with or characteristic of mental derangement.; "was declared insane"; "insane laughter" |
| adj. | 3. delirious, excited, frantic, mad, unrestrained | marked by uncontrolled excitement or emotion.; "a crowd of delirious baseball fans"; "something frantic in their gaiety"; "a mad whirl of pleasure" |
| ~ wild | marked by extreme lack of restraint or control.; "wild talk"; "wild parties" |
| adj. | 4. harebrained, insane, mad | very foolish.; "harebrained ideas"; "took insane risks behind the wheel"; "a completely mad scheme to build a bridge between two mountains" |
| ~ foolish | devoid of good sense or judgment.; "foolish remarks"; "a foolish decision" |
| rage | | |
| n. (feeling) | 1. fury, madness, rage | a feeling of intense anger.; "hell hath no fury like a woman scorned"; "his face turned red with rage" |
| ~ anger, ire, choler | a strong emotion; a feeling that is oriented toward some real or supposed grievance. |
| ~ wrath | intense anger (usually on an epic scale). |
| ~ lividity | a state of fury so great the face becomes discolored. |
| n. (state) | 2. rage | a state of extreme anger.; "she fell into a rage and refused to answer" |
| ~ angriness, anger | the state of being angry. |
| n. (state) | 3. passion, rage | something that is desired intensely.; "his rage for fame destroyed him" |
| ~ desire | something that is desired. |
| n. (state) | 4. rage | violent state of the elements.; "the sea hurled itself in thundering rage against the rocks" |
| ~ violence | a turbulent state resulting in injuries and destruction etc.. |
| n. (cognition) | 5. craze, cult, fad, furor, furore, rage | an interest followed with exaggerated zeal.; "he always follows the latest fads"; "it was all the rage that season" |
| ~ fashion | the latest and most admired style in clothes and cosmetics and behavior. |
| v. (stative) | 6. rage, ramp, storm | behave violently, as if in state of a great anger. |
| ~ behave, act, do | behave in a certain manner; show a certain behavior; conduct or comport oneself.; "You should act like an adult"; "Don't behave like a fool"; "What makes her do this way?"; "The dog acts ferocious, but he is really afraid of people" |
| v. (stative) | 7. rage | be violent; as of fires and storms. |
| ~ be | have the quality of being; (copula, used with an adjective or a predicate noun).; "John is rich"; "This is not a good answer" |
| v. (emotion) | 8. rage | feel intense anger.; "Rage against the dying of the light!" |
| ~ blow a fuse, blow one's stack, flip one's lid, flip one's wig, fly off the handle, go ballistic, have a fit, have kittens, hit the ceiling, hit the roof, lose one's temper, throw a fit, blow up, combust | get very angry and fly into a rage.; "The professor combusted when the student didn't know the answer to a very elementary question"; "Spam makes me go ballistic" |
| ~ foam at the mouth, froth at the mouth | be in a state of uncontrolled anger. |
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