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rage
noun as in extreme anger
Strongest matches
animosity, bitterness, exasperation, excitement, frenzy, furor, fury, indignation, irritation, madness, mania, obsession, outburst, passion, resentment, temper, violence
Strong matches
acerbity, acrimony, agitation, apoplexy, asperity, blowup, bluster, choler, convulsion, dander, eruption, explosion, ferment, ferocity, fireworks, gall, heat, hemorrhage, huff, hysterics, ire, paroxysm, rampage, raving, spasm, spleen, squall, storm, tantrum, umbrage, uproar, upset, vehemence, wrath
Weak match
noun as in something in vogue; popular notion
Example Sentences
The US has been criticised by humanitarian organisations for deciding to supply Ukraine with landmines, as the war in eastern Europe rages on.
His rendition of “I Am What I Am” that brings the first act to a close emphasizes Albin’s rage.
These numbers don’t reveal much evidence of raging majoritarian white nationalism or the notion that African Americans would be alienated by flag-waving.
He embodies that seething, alienated rage of people who feel like they’ve been left to rot in the dark corners of the country, unseen, unheard and hopeless for far too long.
On Friday, Judge Kimberly Menninger said the evidence showed that Woodward’s crime required planning and went beyond “a fit of rage.”
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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