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View definitions for enrage

enrage

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Example Sentences

Residents were so enraged in the 1920s that some carried out a series of attacks on the aqueduct, blasting it with dynamite.

Her actions enraged Trump, who called her "racist," "grossly incompetent" and a "total disaster."

From Salon

For starkly conformist Brazil, Irwin’s sense of unconstrained freedom may help clarify just what enraged those destructive observers.

Editorial board members were reportedly enraged at the move, with several “contemplating what action to take, ranging from resigning, quitting the board, or a statement,” per Tani.

From Salon

As a junior equalities minister under Johnson, she enraged many on the left when she challenged the notion there was widespread institutional racism in Britain.

From BBC

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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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