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    enrage
    /ɪnˈreɪdʒ/

    verb

    • 1. make (someone) very angry: "the students were enraged at these new rules"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. to cause someone to become very angry: Plans to build a new nightclub in the neighbourhood have enraged local residents. enraged at He was enraged at the article about him. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. to get angry. lose your temper She never lost her temper, never raised her voice.

  3. to cause someone to become very angry: Plans to build a new nightclub in the neighborhood have enraged local residents. enraged at He was enraged at the article about him. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. to get angry. lose your temper She never lost her temper, never raised her voice.

  4. The meaning of ENRAGE is to fill with rage : anger. How to use enrage in a sentence.

  5. Enrage definition: to make extremely angry; put into a rage; infuriate. See examples of ENRAGE used in a sentence.

  6. to enrage or to infuriate is to provoke wrath: They enrage (infuriate) him by their deliberate and continual injustice. to incense is to inflame with indignation or anger: to incense a person by making insulting remarks.

  7. ENRAGE definition: to make someone very angry: . Learn more.

  8. To enrage or to infuriate is to provoke wrath: They enrage (infuriate) her by their continual harassment. To incense is to inflame with indignation or anger: to incense a person by making insulting remarks.

  9. verb. To put into a rage; make very angry; infuriate. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. Synonyms: retainer. inflame. incite. exasperate. annoy. provoke. needle. madden. ire. incense. infuriate. anger. burn. Antonyms: compose. placate. appease. soothe. pacify. please. calm. Origin of Enrage.

  10. Definition of enrage verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  11. Something that enrages you makes you incredibly angry. The news that their favorite teacher has been fired might enrage a group of students, and witnessing someone mistreating an animal might also enrage them. The 14th century verb enrage combines the prefix en-, "make or put in," and rage, with its Latin root rabies, "madness, rage, or fury."