Environmentalists who fought for the regulations are furious about the loopholes and the continued spills.
Oil Companies Are Profiting From Illegal Spills. And California Lets Them.|by Janet Wilson, The Desert Sun, and Lylla Younes, ProPublica|September 18, 2020|ProPublica
Now, many face extinction and some business leaders are furious that Rome has offered loans rather than subsidies to help suppliers survive the pandemic.
Can Italy’s Fashion Artisans Survive COVID?|Charu Kasturi|August 30, 2020|Ozy
The only negative is that afterward you’ll be furious you didn’t know about it sooner.
This Weekend: You’ll Never Bathe the Same Way Again|Joshua Eferighe|August 21, 2020|Ozy
The story was so appalling, the attack so brutish and morally offensive, that it provoked an immediate, furious response.
Why It Was Right to Question Rolling Stone’s U-VA Rape Story|Michael Moynihan|December 5, 2014|DAILY BEAST
I also believe the administration is hiding something about Benghazi and Fast and Furious, but the key word is “believe.”
The Facts About Ferguson Matter, Dammit|Doug McIntyre|December 3, 2014|DAILY BEAST
“Operation Fast and Furious” continues to rankle some Republicans.
The GOP Senate: A New Utopia Dawns|P. J. O’Rourke|November 8, 2014|DAILY BEAST
“They are furious with Pippa,” an aristocratic source told Radar Online at the time.
NBC’s Today Show ‘Hires’ Pippa Middleton|Lloyd Grove, Tom Sykes|November 5, 2014|DAILY BEAST
And by the time it was all over, his fellow Republicans in Washington were furious.
Ted Cruz Quits Screwing With the GOP|Patricia Murphy|October 16, 2014|DAILY BEAST
He was furious at the situation and at Mamise for teasing him so.
The Cup of Fury|Rupert Hughes
He came up in a furious rage, cursing us and brandishing a revolver.
The Escaping Club|A. J. Evans
Both the Mercer girls kissed Dal on the strength of it, and Anne was furious.
When a Man Marries|Mary Roberts Rinehart
He now went to Mass, and was furious with his father-in-law, who was ruining the family on account of Nana.
A Zola Dictionary|J. G. Patterson
At this the toy captain was so furious that he shook with anger from head to foot.
The Other Side of the Sun|Evelyn Sharp
British Dictionary definitions for furious
furious
/ (ˈfjʊərɪəs) /
adjective
extremely angry or annoyed; raging
violent, wild, or unrestrained, as in speed, vigour, energy, etc
Where Did The Phrase “Fast And The Furious” Come From?The continued box office success of the Fast and the Furious franchise gives moviegoers and word-lovers something to cheer about. Beyond the stunning action sequences, though, audiences, including us, actually really enjoy the title itself.
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Words related to furious
enraged, frenzied, raging, vehement, livid, violent, frantic, desperate, incensed, fierce, frenetic, agitated, intense, intensified, bent, beside oneself, boiling, crazed, demented, fit to be tied