infuriation
English
    
    
Pronunciation
    
- Rhymes: -eɪʃən
 
Noun
    
infuriation (countable and uncountable, plural infuriations)
- (uncountable) Extreme anger.
- 2008, Sloane Crosley, “You On a Stick”, in I Was Told There’d Be Cake, New York: Riverhead Books, page 178:
- Any compassion I felt for my middle school friend had evaporated, leaving little hard nuggets of infuriation.
 
 
 - (countable) Something that causes extreme anger; an expression or instance of extreme anger.
- 1923, T. E. Lawrence, letter to Edward Garnett dated 16 December, 1923, in David Garnett (ed.), Letters of T. E. Lawrence, London: Jonathan Cape, 1938, p. 444,
- He likes the chapters in which I ramble round among the cobwebs of my own mind—those you wanted cut! Quaint, isn’t it? He also likes others, which you praised.
 - That’s one infuriation of letters, of all artistic effort… their lack of an absolute.
 
 - 1942, Wallace Stevens, “Credences of Summer”, in The Collected Poems of Wallace Stevens, New York: Knopf, published 1971, page 372:
- […] spring’s infuriations over and a long way
To the first autumnal inhalations, 
 
 - 1923, T. E. Lawrence, letter to Edward Garnett dated 16 December, 1923, in David Garnett (ed.), Letters of T. E. Lawrence, London: Jonathan Cape, 1938, p. 444,
 
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