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  1. Dictionary
    wroth
    /rəʊθ/

    adjective

    • 1. angry: archaic "Sir Leicester is majestically wroth"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. wroth. adjective. ˈrȯth. also ˈrōth. Synonyms of wroth. : intensely angry : highly incensed : wrathful. Synonyms. angered. angry. apoplectic. ballistic. cheesed off [ chiefly British] choleric. enraged. foaming. fuming. furious. hopping. horn-mad. hot. incensed. indignant. inflamed. enflamed. infuriated. irate.

  3. Wroth definition: angry; wrathful (usually used predicatively). See examples of WROTH used in a sentence.

  4. When you're wroth, you're absolutely furious. If you borrow your sister's bike without asking and bend its wheel running into a parked car, don't be surprised if she's completely wroth. This is an old-fashioned way to say "irate" or "infuriated."

  5. 1. angry; wrathful (usually used predicatively) He was wroth to see the damage to his home. 2. stormy; violent; turbulent. the wroth sea. Most material © 2005, 1997, 1991 by Penguin Random House LLC. Modified entries © 2019 by Penguin Random House LLC and HarperCollins Publishers Ltd. Word origin.

  6. Jun 12, 2024 · wroth (comparative more wroth, superlative most wroth) (formal, archaic) Full of anger; wrathful. Synonym: wrath

  7. wroth - vehemently incensed and condemnatory; "they trembled before the wrathful queen"; "but wroth as he was, a short struggle ended in reconciliation"

  8. wroth (rôth, roth or, esp. Brit., rōth), USA pronunciation adj. angry; wrathful (usually used predicatively): He was wroth to see the damage to his home. stormy; violent; turbulent: the wroth sea.

  9. Synonyms for WROTH: angry, enraged, indignant, angered, infuriated, mad, outraged, furious; Antonyms of WROTH: pleased, delighted, accepting, accommodating, agreeable, complaisant, friendly, cordial.

  10. adjective. Angry; wrathful; incensed. Webster's New World. Similar definitions. Synonyms: wrothful. wrathful. Origin of Wroth. Middle English wroth, wrooth, from Old English wrāþ, from Proto-Germanic *wraiþaz (“cruel" ), from Proto-Indo-European *wreit- (“to turn" ).

  11. The meaning of wroth. Definition of wroth. English dictionary and integrated thesaurus for learners, writers, teachers, and students with advanced, intermediate, and beginner levels.