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  1. Dictionary
    infuriate

    verb

    • 1. make (someone) extremely angry and impatient: "I was infuriated by your article"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Infuriated is the past tense and past participle of infuriate, which means to make someone extremely angry. Learn more about the synonyms, antonyms, and usage of infuriated with examples from the Cambridge English Corpus and the Hansard archive.

  3. Infuriate is a verb that means to make furious or angry. It can also be an adjective that describes someone who is furiously angry. See synonyms, examples, word history and more.

  4. If you've ever been incredibly mad, you know what it is to be infuriated. Your infuriated math teacher might make the whole class stay after school to retake a test, and an infuriated sister might slap her little brother across the face.

  5. adjective. 1. extremely angry or annoyed; raging. 2. violent, wild, or unrestrained, as in speed, vigour, energy, etc. Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers. Examples of 'infuriated' in a sentence. infuriated.

  6. to make someone extremely angry: The referee’s calls infuriated the home team fans. (Definition of infuriate from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) Examples of infuriate. infuriate. It also probably surprised, and infuriated, his boss, the president. From Foreign Policy.

  7. verb. tr to anger; annoy. adjective. archaic. furious; infuriated. Discover More. Derived Forms. inˈfuriatingly, adverb. inˈfuriˌating, adjective. inˈfuriately, adverb. inˌfuriˈation, noun. Discover More. Other Words From. in·fu ri·ate·ly adverb. in·fu ri·a tion noun. un in·fu ri·at ed adjective. Discover More. Word History and Origins.

  8. Different things infuriate different people: whatever makes you angry, mad, or ticked off infuriates you. Fury is a word for "anger" that should help with this word: to infuriate is to fill someone with fury, i.e., anger.