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  1. Dictionary
    angry
    /ˈaŋɡri/

    adjective

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. having a strong feeling against someone who has behaved badly, making you want to shout at them or hurt them: He's really angry at/with me for upsetting Sophie. I don't understand what he's angry about. [ + that ] They feel angry that their complaints were ignored. I got really angry with her. It made me really angry. Synonyms. apoplectic.

  3. The meaning of ANGRY is feeling or showing anger. How to use angry in a sentence.

  4. To be angry is to be furious. People who get angry a lot have a short temper. This is a word for a common emotion: being mad or enraged. People get mad all the time, about traffic, homework, parents, children, and even the weather. When you're angry it's hard to think straight: you see red.

  5. Angry definition: feeling or showing anger or strong resentment (usually followed by at, with, or about). See examples of ANGRY used in a sentence.

  6. When you are angry, you feel strong emotion about something that you consider unfair, cruel, or insulting. American English : angry / ˈæŋgri / Arabic : غَاضِب

  7. 1. feeling anger or strong resentment: to be angry at the dean; to be angry about the insult. 2. expressing, caused by, or characterized by anger; wrathful: angry words. 3. Chiefly New Eng. and Midland U.S. inflamed, as a sore.

  8. having strong feelings about something that you dislike very much or about an unfair situation. Her behaviour really made me angry. I started to get really angry and upset. The players were attacked by an angry mob. The comments provoked an angry response from union leaders. Thousands of angry demonstrators filled the square.

  9. ANGRY definition: having a strong feeling against someone who has behaved badly, making you want to shout at them or…. Learn more.

  10. Having a menacing aspect; threatening. Angry clouds on the horizon. American Heritage. More Adjective Definitions (5) Synonyms: typhonic. tornadic. shirty. wild. tempestuous. raging. furious.

  11. The earliest known use of the adjective angry is in the Middle English period (1150—1500). OED's earliest evidence for angry is from around 1380, in Sir Ferumbras . angry is formed within English, by derivation.