Definition of infuriating in English:
infuriating
See synonyms for infuriatingTranslate infuriating into Spanish
adjective
Making one extremely angry and impatient; very annoying.
‘that infuriating half-smile on his face’- ‘Millions of kids, through the book, feel the infuriating injustices of autocracy.’
- ‘The battle for power has moved into the shadows, casting an infuriating fog over its news coverage.’
- ‘This time his team chose the big city to produce their most infuriating performance of the season.’
- ‘In any case, dealing with life on a bad team can be infuriating.’
- ‘I refer to the infuriating trend for some organisations to simply ignore the email they receive.’
- ‘His inability to see her side of this was infuriating.’
- ‘Elizabeth found the question, voiced so mildly, infuriating.’
- ‘The whole area of politics and campaigning is infuriating at times.’
- ‘This argument that bad doctors are responsible for the medical malpractice crisis is the most infuriating argument out there.’
- ‘On the other hand, this game can be absolutely infuriating.’
- ‘That suspicion has been inflamed by infuriating inconsistency.’
- ‘To actually go and try to find it can be infuriating and virtually impossible.’
- ‘The use of marriage as a wedge issue by this administration is both infuriating and insulting to me.’
- ‘While inevitably self-indulgent and infuriating in parts, it is also smart and surprising.’
- ‘Such uncertainty, though infuriating, is apt.’
- ‘It goes to the heart of this very peculiar product, which at one and the same time is both endearing and infuriating.’
- ‘His collections are by turns brilliant, challenging, infuriating - and totally unwearable.’
- ‘The problem is that it is as infuriating as it is inspiring.’
- ‘The infuriating part of all this is that the world is so helpless in such situations.’
- ‘What's infuriating about the photography ban is not just how stupid it is, but how wrong it is, too.’
Pronunciation
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