infuriate
infuriate 英 [ɪnˈfjʊərieɪt] 美 [ɪnˈfjʊrieɪt]
vt. 激怒;使大怒 adj. 狂怒的
进行时:infuriating 过去式:infuriated 过去分词:infuriated 第三人称单数:infuriates
- Different things infuriate different people: whatever makes you angry, mad, or ticked off infuriates you.
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- vt. 激怒;使大怒
- adj. 狂怒的
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1. Yesterday's decision will infuriate Turkey and Brazil, who will see it as the established powers quashing a genuine attempt at mediation by two new voices on the world stage.
昨日的决定会激怒土耳其和巴西,它们会把它视为公认的大国宣布世界舞台上两个新的声音所作的一次真正的和解尝试无效。
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2. A research paper published alongside the HMIC report will infuriate Home Office ministers who have been arguing there is no direct link between falling police numbers and levels of crime.
和HMIC的报告同时发表的一篇文章可能会激怒内务大臣们,大臣们一直坚称在降低的警察人数和犯罪率之间没有直接联系。
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3. Even the public suggestion that it is considering such a move is likely to infuriate Chinese authorities.
它公开表示正在考虑撤出中国这件事本身,也有可能激怒中国当局。
- infuriate (v.) 1660s, from Italian infuriato, from Medieval Latin infuriatus, past participle of infuriare "to madden, enrage," from Latin in furia "in a fury," from ablative of furia (see fury). Also from 1660s as an adjective in English, but this use is rare. Related: Infuriated; infuriating.
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