Which preposition to use with angered
He did not understand the anger of Mr. DAWES.
" His scorn put me into a fury, in which anger at his brutishness and the presence of the girl on the sorrel moved my pride to a piece of naked folly.
Are you going to chuck this business and turn good?" "You asked me whether I'd heard anything more about that rhyme I wrote," answered the other, rousing himself, and speaking with a thrill of anger in his voice.
Patricia clearly perceived that, whatever had been her husband's relations with this woman, he had been manifestly entrapped into the imbroglioa victim to Mrs. Pendomer's inordinate love of attention, which was, indeed, tolerably notorious; and Patricia's anger against Rudolph Musgrave gave way to a rather contemptuous pity and a half-maternal remorse for not having taken better care of him.
On the other hand, after the first shock and disgust at seeing him, Edith's anger with Bruce himself had entirely passed.
After some waiting, and well-simulated anger on the part of the owner, along comes a dusky Siwash, thin, but keen-looking, and none too mild-tempered.
Something in these doggerel lines excited Jack Vance's wrath above measure, the last verse especially raising his anger to boiling-point, so that it fairly bubbled over.
And turn away Thine anger from us.
There was a large zebra, apparently ill-tempered, which showed his anger by running at and butting every animal that came in his way.
O true as the blade That slew thee, and made My fear and thine anger For ever to fade Ah!
She was in the sudden fierce grip of such anger as kills, of such defiance as suffers death and does not yield.
He left in a fit of anger over some little thing, and now" She was dangerously near breaking down, and Oldfield could plainly hear smothered sobs beside him on the side of his chair toward which he chose not to look.
" The Major passed on to me, and surveyed my left arm more in anger than in sorrow.
Oh, Mr. Secretary, those stratagems have given me more sad hours than all the misfortunes in war which have befallen the king, and look like the effects of God's anger towards us.
He did not openly evince anger toward him, in order not to alienate him, but to the end that he might find his foe unprepared set sail from Egypt with the avowed object of making one more campaign against the Parthians.
When this letter was read in the hearing of those who were come to Arthur's solemnity, a great tumult arose, for they were angered beyond measure.
" Dick restrained his anger under this insulting blow, perceiving, even in the hotness of his wrath, that the other was unconscious of the double ignominy implied in dealing with soldiers' rewards as personal bribes, and proffering money for common brotherly offices.
Of course he struggled furiously, making a noise all the time just like that cursed humming, and using the most outlandish phrases in his anger about "going inside to Them," and "taking the way of the water and the wind," and God only knows what more besides, that I tried in vain to recall afterwards, but which turned me sick with horror and amazement as I listened.
" I turned wrathfullyfor a London street-boy's yell, let off at point-blank range, is, in effect, like the smack of an open handbut the inscription on the staring yellow poster that was held up for my inspection changed my anger into curiosity.
But not in anger alonein hatred too, which stands to anger like a chronic to an acute disease, a man may indulge with the greatest delight: [Footnote 1: Rhet., i., 11; ii., 2.] Now hatred is by far the longest pleasure, Men love in haste, but they detest at leisure
For the first time since she had come to Acol, and encountered the kindly sympathy of Richard Lambert, she felt bitterly angered against him when, having parted from the prince at the door of the pavilion, she turned, to walk back towards the house and came face to face with the young man.
She felt as if she had never seen anger before that moment.
As soon as his death was announced in the transparency outside the office of O Seculo, there were demonstrations of anger among the crowd and some conflicts with the police.
Gradually the mass of the Creoles became so angered with the Americans that they wished to lay their grievances before the French Minister at Philadelphia; and many of them crossed the Mississippi and settled under the Spanish flag.
If Mrs. Godwin has been the cause of your misconstruction, I am very angry, tell her; yet it is not an anger unto death.