/ˈæŋ.ɡɹi/
OriginFrom Middle English angry; see anger.
- Displaying or feeling anger.
“His face became angry.”
“An angry mob started looting the warehouse.”
“Then we relapsed into a discomfited silence, and wished we were anywhere else. But Miss Thorn relieved the situation by laughing aloud, and with such a hearty enjoyment that instead of getting angry a”
- Inflamed and painful.
“The broken glass left two angry cuts across my arm.”
- figurativelyDark and stormy, menacing.
“Angry clouds raced across the sky.”
“[…]nor dreads he the angry sea[…]”
“When she and her sister were away at Williamsburg, Nancy and I were more like founderers on a raft adrift in an angry sea.”
- obsolete, transitiveTo anger.
“Onely they that repent, and are verie ſorie that they haue angried God with their ſinnes, and yet truſt that they are forgiuẽ them for Chriſtes ſake, and that the reſt of their weakeneſſe and vnperfec”
“The King ſent to the Londoners requeſting to borrowe of them one thouſande pounde, whiche they ſtoutely denyed, and alſo euil entreated, bette and néere hand ſlew a certain Lumbard that woulde haue le”
“For when the Arabians being offended with Heraclius for denying them their pay, and for his religion had ſeuered themſelues from him, Mahomet ioyned himſelfe to the angried ſouldiers, and ſtirred vp t”
Formsangrier(comparative) · more angry(comparative) · angriest(superlative) · most angry(superlative) · angries(present, singular, third-person) · angrying(participle, present) · angried(participle, past) · angried(past)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0