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词汇 infuriate
释义

Definition of infuriate in English:

infuriate

verb ɪnˈfjʊərɪeɪtɪnˈfjuriˌeɪt
[with object]
  • Make (someone) extremely angry and impatient.

    使大怒,激怒

    I was infuriated by your article

    我被你的文章激怒了。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • If there is anything that infuriates me, it is being ignored or dismissed.
    • It got to the point where it was infuriating me that much I shoved it in her mouth.
    • If anything infuriates me it's this fake morale-boosting stuff.
    • You know, it just really infuriates me to think that this is still an issue for me at the age of 36!
    • I am obviously not a football fan, but it infuriates me to see all these people who think that just because a man has money he should give it willingly to anyone who asks for it.
    • It infuriates him that they've decided to come in and say untruths about him.
    • And on the days when I say something that angers and infuriates you, tell me!
    • The suggestion that rural communities in Scotland will lose out in the broadband revolution infuriates him.
    • The level of ignorance this question represents infuriates me.
    • It infuriates me that people cause so much mindless damage, which costs the car owners a small fortune.
    • That anyone would find his lousy play any good infuriates him.
    • The whole thing infuriates me because whoever was in charge of the creative copy for this ad series was taking the easy way out, and didn't bother thinking it through completely.
    • The article that Dan talks about here just infuriates me.
    • What infuriates me most and makes me wish for a second TV at my place is the choice of ‘celebrities’ to take part in this jumble sale of food.
    • I have always found this upsetting as an environmentalist, just as the current scandal infuriates me as a typographer.
    • Don't make yourself look at what infuriates you.
    • This perpetuation of the idea that mental illness is less legitimate than physical illness absolutely infuriates me.
    • Having immersed myself in his life, it infuriates me that the man behind some of the greatest films ever made should have been reduced to this awkward, exiled and in some ways grotesque figure.
    • What infuriates me is the undervaluing of the sort of help which keeps older women reasonably fit - physiotherapy, chiropody, check-ups and so on.
    • He annoys me and infuriates me but he also kind of intrigues me.
    Synonyms
    enrage, incense, anger, madden, inflame, send into a rage, make someone's blood boil, stir up, fire up
    exasperate, antagonize, provoke, rile, make one's hackles rise, annoy, irritate, nettle, gall, get on someone's nerves, rub up the wrong way, ruffle someone's feathers, try someone's patience, irk, vex, pique
    North American rankle, ride
    informal aggravate, make one see red, get someone's back up, get someone's dander up, get someone's goat, peeve, needle, get under someone's skin, get up someone's nose, hack off
    British informal wind up, get at, nark, get across, get on someone's wick, brown off, cheese off
    North American informal bug, tick off, gravel, bum out
    vulgar slang piss off
    exasperating, maddening, provoking, annoying, irritating, irksome, vexing, vexatious, trying, tiresome, bothersome
    informal aggravating, pesky, cussed, confounded, infernal, pestiferous, plaguy, pestilent

Origin

Mid 17th century: from medieval Latin infuriat- 'made angry', from the verb infuriare, from in- 'into' + Latin furia 'fury'.

Rhymes

luxuriate

Definition of infuriate in US English:

infuriate

verbɪnˈfjuriˌeɪtinˈfyo͞orēˌāt
[with object]
  • Make (someone) extremely angry and impatient.

    使大怒,激怒

    her silences infuriated him
    Example sentencesExamples
    • It infuriates me that people cause so much mindless damage, which costs the car owners a small fortune.
    • The whole thing infuriates me because whoever was in charge of the creative copy for this ad series was taking the easy way out, and didn't bother thinking it through completely.
    • The suggestion that rural communities in Scotland will lose out in the broadband revolution infuriates him.
    • What infuriates me most and makes me wish for a second TV at my place is the choice of ‘celebrities’ to take part in this jumble sale of food.
    • You know, it just really infuriates me to think that this is still an issue for me at the age of 36!
    • It got to the point where it was infuriating me that much I shoved it in her mouth.
    • Don't make yourself look at what infuriates you.
    • The level of ignorance this question represents infuriates me.
    • If there is anything that infuriates me, it is being ignored or dismissed.
    • That anyone would find his lousy play any good infuriates him.
    • The article that Dan talks about here just infuriates me.
    • What infuriates me is the undervaluing of the sort of help which keeps older women reasonably fit - physiotherapy, chiropody, check-ups and so on.
    • And on the days when I say something that angers and infuriates you, tell me!
    • He annoys me and infuriates me but he also kind of intrigues me.
    • Having immersed myself in his life, it infuriates me that the man behind some of the greatest films ever made should have been reduced to this awkward, exiled and in some ways grotesque figure.
    • It infuriates him that they've decided to come in and say untruths about him.
    • If anything infuriates me it's this fake morale-boosting stuff.
    • This perpetuation of the idea that mental illness is less legitimate than physical illness absolutely infuriates me.
    • I have always found this upsetting as an environmentalist, just as the current scandal infuriates me as a typographer.
    • I am obviously not a football fan, but it infuriates me to see all these people who think that just because a man has money he should give it willingly to anyone who asks for it.
    Synonyms
    enrage, incense, anger, madden, inflame, send into a rage, make someone's blood boil, stir up, fire up
    exasperating, maddening, provoking, annoying, irritating, irksome, vexing, vexatious, trying, tiresome, bothersome

Origin

Mid 17th century: from medieval Latin infuriat- ‘made angry’, from the verb infuriare, from in- ‘into’ + Latin furia ‘fury’.

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