furioso
furious ; in a rage ; livid ; berserk ; enraged.
'Punch' satirised the opponents more cruelly: 'Here is an institution doomed to scare the furious devotees of laissez faire'.
When a library user comes to the reference desk in frustration and desperation - perhaps in a rage or in tears, it is often an unforgettable (and sometimes unpleasant) opportunity to test one's problem-solving abilities and diplomatic talents.
Therefore he felt free to leave but the manager and the trustees were livid.
Today, hyperbolic comic and cartoon imagery is an established movie aesthetic - a berserk but ironic Pop Art expressionism.
This incredible newsreel from the 1930s shows the power of anger as an enraged mob stormed a prison holding two kidnappers and killed them both.
entrar furioso
storm in
The robber panicked and took hostages after storming in to rob the bank with a gun.
estar furioso [Usado en sentido figurado para indicar enojo]
fume
fume with + anger
fume with + rage
seethe
seethe with + anger
seethe with + rage
Who has not had occasion to fume at the need to consult a large number of Official journals in order to reconstitute the current text of a particular regulation from all its amendments and corrigenda!.
He uses his quirky wit and friendly banter to brighten people's mood when they are feeling low or fuming with anger.
Some people, being excessively liverish, cannot refrain from fuming with rage and shouting abuse when they come across stories of injustice, ignorance and foul play in the newspapers.
But Palestinian Arabs have learned that if they seethe publicly about anything, the world media will take them seriously.
Seething with anger, hundreds of people yesterday came out on the roads waving banners, shouting slogans and waving their fists in the air, demanding justice.
Most Iraqis I speak with nowadays are seething with rage towards the occupiers of their country.
estar furioso de indignación
seethe with + indignation
But with both sides seething with indignation, it's difficult to imagine a breakthrough in the vicious cycle of threats, sanctions and provocations.
estar muy furioso
seethe with + indignation
But with both sides seething with indignation, it's difficult to imagine a breakthrough in the vicious cycle of threats, sanctions and provocations.
ponerse furioso
get + Reflexivo + (all) worked up (about)
get + (all) hot under the collar
come + unstitched
see + red
Ordinary people can sit around and get morally worked up about the evil of drugs the way they once got worked up about the 'red menace'.
She is quick to get hot under the collar, but once the problem is ironed out she forgets it entirely.
When the car ahead of hers chose to stop at the yellow light rather than rush through, she came unstitched.
His arrogance, his assumption of her acute need for him, made her see red and she struggled for self-control.
salir furioso
storm out (of)
A 24-year-old man has killed himself with chloroform after storming out of work when a colleague taunted him about never making the coffee.
sentirse furioso de indignación
seethe with + indignation
But with both sides seething with indignation, it's difficult to imagine a breakthrough in the vicious cycle of threats, sanctions and provocations.
sentirse muy furioso
seethe with + indignation
But with both sides seething with indignation, it's difficult to imagine a breakthrough in the vicious cycle of threats, sanctions and provocations.