rage
IPA: rˈeɪdʒ
noun
- Violent uncontrolled anger.
- A current fashion or fad.
- (slang, US, Australia, New Zealand) An exciting and boisterous party.
- (obsolete) Any vehement passion.
verb
- (intransitive) To act or speak in heightened anger.
- (sometimes figurative) To move with great violence, as a storm etc.
- (slang, US, Australia, New Zealand) To party hard; to have a good time.
- (obsolete, rare) To enrage.
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Examples of "rage" in Sentences
- It was a mutual misanthropic rage.
- Rage was dejected with the demotion.
- He saw the rage in his father's eyes.
- The flames of my rage will incinerate you
- The flames of my rage will incinerate you.
- Once again, Billy begins to stammer in rage.
- The troll rages and destroys the instruments.
- On the distant horizon, the pyrotechnic flame wars rage.
- It is always totally unanimated, no anger, no rage, no tears, nothing.
- At the time the architectural style was the rage in the United States.
- Finding ways to express themselves and their rage is an endless pursuit.
- What seems to be fueling this rage is a fear of the loss of authority — a changing of the guard.
- I would love to know from any French readers whether admin rage is really claiming so many lives.
- You're home life must be really bad when the only outlet you have to vent your rage is a political blog.
- He started his quest with an Internet search of the word rage and got a smorgasbord of terms: road rage, air rage, retail rage, computer rage, travel and leisure rage.
- Every kind of licentious language and actions was practised in the worship of these deities, accompanied with a frantic rage called orgies, from the Greek word for _rage_.
- I wasn't having a go at you or Daubney, n, my rage is aimed at the sick rabble - some of them very educated rabble too - on some of these forums who will not allow justice to take its course.
- Congressman opens hearing on Islamic radicalization, says 'rage and hysteria' unwarranted sns-ap-us-muslims-terror-hearings WASHINGTON AP - Under heightened security, Rep. Peter King opened hearings Thursday into Islamic radicalization in America, dismissing what he called the "rage and hysteria" surrounding the hearings.
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