angerful

English

Etymology

From anger + -ful.

Adjective

angerful (comparative more angerful, superlative most angerful)

  1. Full of anger, expressing anger.
    • 1860, Holme Lee, Kathie Brande, page 37:
      "There, Bootle, that will do; we appreciate your sentiments to the very core of our hearts," said my kinswoman, frowning upon her from those angerful eyes of hers.
    • 1986, Frank X Tolbert, Evelyn Oppenheimer, Tolbert of Texas: the man and his work
      Captain Johnson called Lieutenant Reynolds to the quarterdeck and said, with tears running down his angerful face, "I don't know whether to surrender or not...

Synonyms

Anagrams

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