enraged - Meaning in Hindi
Meaning of enraged in Hindi
- ख़फ़ा
- गुस्से में आया
- ख़फ़ा
enraged Definition
- very angry; furious.
- to cause someone to become very angry:
enraged Example
- He was enraged at the article about him.
- Plans to build a new nightclub in the neighbourhood have enraged local residents.
- Enraged readers boycotted the newspaper.
- School curriculum changes enraged a number of parents.
- With them rose half Britain, enraged, for other causes, at Roman rule.
- She had enraged two powerful men this day, and all within a span of an hour!
- The enraged Finnish colonel thereupon approached Gustavus III.
- Zaki, enraged at his nephews desertion, marched out of Shiraz towards Isfahan.
- Enraged at this defeat, Gilpin's enemies laid their complaint before Bonner, bishop of London, who secured a royal warrant for his apprehension.
- Demeter, at first enraged, afterwards calmed down, and washed herself in the river Ladon by way of purification.
- This so enraged Ajax that it caused his death (Odyssey, xi.
- The goddess, enraged at the insult, asks her father Anu to avenge her.
- If we thought Howie was upset over the Youngblood matter, it was arsenic versus ice cream compared to how enraged he was over a challenge to his ability.
- To defend himself from the enraged Shammar `Ali summoned the `Anaza from across the Euphrates.
- This enraged the Roman populace; a riot broke out on the 13th of January 1793, and Bassville, who was driving with his family to the Corso, was dragged from his carriage and so roughly handled that he died.
- Garrison's visit to England enraged the pro-slavery people and press of the United States at the outset, and when he returned home in September with the "protest" against the Colonization Society, and announced that he had engaged the services of George Thompson as a lecturer against American slavery, there were fresh outbursts of rage on every hand.
- If Juvenal was banished at the age of eighty, the author of his banishment could not have been the " enraged actor " in reference to whom the original lines were written, as Paris was put to death in 83, and Juvenal was certainly writing satires long after loo.
- Protestant nobles of England, enraged at the tolerant policy of James, had been in negotiation with William of Orange since 1687.
- Even Napoleon, though enraged at the firmness with which he maintained the papal claims, could, not resist his personal fascination.
- She is said to have loved a young man named Dardanus, of Abydos, and, enraged at his neglect of her, to have put out his eyes while he was asleep. The gods, as a punishment for this, ordered her, by an oracle, to take the famous but rather mythical lover's leap from the Leucadian promontory (Photius, Cod.
- In many parts the peasants and townsfolk, enraged by the licence of the French, hung on his flank and rear.
- This much enraged the duke, who took active steps against the citizens, and tried (1527) to carry off the bishop, Pierre de la Baume (1522-1544), who soon found it best to make his submission.
- So enraged was he with his brother Henry's acceptance of a cardinal's hat in July 1747, that he deliberately broke off communication with his father in Rome (who had approved the step), nor did he ever see him again.
- Thereupon Andvari, enraged, laid upon the hoard and all who should possess it a curse.
- Most of the inhabitants continued heathens until, according to the legend, Salsa, a Christian maiden, threw the head of their serpent idol into the sea, whereupon the enraged populace stoned her to death.
- When Achilles, enraged with Agamemnon, deserted the Greeks, Hector drove them back to their ships, which he almost succeeded in burning.
- Her work was so perfect that Athena, enraged at being unable to find any blemish in it, tore it to pieces.
- In the oldest forms of the legend Hera is not mentioned; but afterwards the wanderings of Leto are ascribed to the jealousy of that goddess, enraged at her amour with Zeus.
- Enraged by this unexpected arrogance, Henry summoned a synod of German bishops to Worms in January 1076, and Hildebrand was declared deposed.
- Leisler had proclaimed the new monarchs of Great Britain and had declared that it was his purpose only to protect the province and the Protestant religion until the arrival of a governor appointed by them; but he was enraged when he learned that he had been ignored and that under the new governor, Colonel Henry Sloughter, his enemies, van Cortlandt and Bayard, had again been appointed to the council.