Which preposition to use with angry
she asked; "he seems to be angry with you.
To this class I was more communicative; and when I severally informed them that I had actually been to the Moon, some of them shrugged their shoulders, others laughed in my face, and some were angry at my supposed attempt to deceive them; but all, with a single exception, were incredulous.
You injured me, twice, in practice play, and I admit that I was somewhat angry about it at the time.
Pulz and Handy Solomon tried to converse by signs, but evidently failed, for their faces showed angry in the twilight.
Once inside, she was met with a sight that made her more angry than ever.
A tall, lean figure rose up from behind the bear-skin and received the sudden brightness full in his face, pale and beautiful, but angry as an avenging angel's.
He had not seen Barbara at breakfast and was rather sorry for her, but she had not known Shillito long, and although she might be angry for a time, her hurt could not be deep.
Then, as if angry on account of a weakness, physical rather than mental, she stood up and smiled defiantly, showing her small white teeth.
Bluff gave him an indignant look, for it pained him to have his pet gun insulted after this rude fashion; but he was too much delighted over the coming of the supply wagon to cherish any animosity; and besides, as Frank said, he never could keep on being angry over a few minutes at a time.
" She paused a moment to let the flattery take effect, and then proceeded: "But then another lady said to me; she said, 'For shame, Clarisse, to laugh at good Dr. Mossy; nobodyneither General Villivicencio, neither any other, has a right to be angry against that noble, gentle, kind, brave'" "Brave!" said the General, with a touch of irony.
"I am too happy to be made angry by her.
I firmly met the beast that with him came: Unmanly fear, confess I to my shame, Came o'er me when I first beheld the beast, In vain I plead, and in despair I ceased When he refused, and angry from me passed Within his cave, where cliffs and rocks are massed; I climbed, but the wild entrance did not gain,
"The teacher is angry to-day," "The teacher is irritable to-day," "The teacher is short-tempered to-day," are phrases too often on the lips of boys, and they produce a feeling of discomfort in the class-room that makes harmony and ease impossible.
"Yesand what you call working," retorted Arthur, angry through and through.
Caesar himself, who had been the most angry of all men with them, still, on account of the unusually high character and loyalty of that city, was every day relaxing something of his displeasure.
It is not manly or honest, they think, to be angry without getting red in the face.
And, while you've made me angry sometimes, when you have refused to be taken in by my best tricks, still it was as one gets angry withwith oneself.
And for the truth of all this, I appeal to their own Office-Books, and defy the most angry among them to deny any article of it.
Angry beyond all endurance, he left the table at length, and walked away through the open windows into the broad veranda or porch which belonged to Castlewood as to all Virginian houses.
So in he comes with me and looks round angry like and sees nothing, and he up with a broom that was near hand and hits me a crig with it.
The Baronet was unusually angry notwithstanding, and stopping short about three steps away, addressed Feltram with a pale face and gleaming eyes.
He tells me, though, that his wife is angry past forgiveness, and does not allow my name to be mentioned in her presence,considers me a perfect monster, who finds his only delight in gloating over fresh victims.
If a weak man, persecuted by others, foolishly becometh angry towards men that are mightier than he, he then becometh himself the cause of his own destruction.