ANGER


Meaning of ANGER in English

n.

Function: noun

Etymology: Middle English, affliction, anger, from Old Norse angr grief; akin to Old English enge narrow, Latin angere to strangle, Greek anchein

Date: 14th century

1 : a strong feeling of displeasure and usually of antagonism

2 : RAGE 2

– an · ger · less \ -l ə s \ adjective

synonyms ANGER , IRE , RAGE , FURY , INDIGNATION , WRATH mean an intense emotional state induced by displeasure. ANGER the most general term, names the reaction but in itself conveys nothing about intensity or justification or manifestation of the emotional state <tried to hide his anger >. IRE more frequent in literary contexts, may suggest greater intensity than anger, often with an evident display of feeling <cheeks flushed dark with ire >. RAGE suggests loss of self-control from violence of emotion <screaming with rage >. FURY is overmastering destructive rage that can verge on madness <in her fury she accused everyone around her of betrayal>. INDIGNATION stresses righteous anger at what one considers unfair, mean, or shameful <a refusal to listen that caused general indignation >. WRATH is likely to suggest a desire or intent to revenge or punish <rose in his wrath and struck his tormentor to the floor>.

Merriam Webster Collegiate English Dictionary.      Merriam Webster - Энциклопедический словарь английского языка.