rage

  • 51Rage — Ra|ge 〈 [ ʒə] f.; Gen.: ; Pl.: unz.; umg.〉 Wut, Raserei; jmdn. in Rage bringen; in Rage geraten; in Rage kommen [Etym.: frz.] …

    Lexikalische Deutsches Wörterbuch

  • 52rage — [13] Rage is a close relative of rabies. It comes via Old French rage from Vulgar Latin *rabia, an alteration of Latin rabiēs ‘madness, frenzy, fury’ (from which English gets rabies). (French rage still means ‘rabies’ as well as ‘anger’.) =>… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 53rage — 1. noun 1) his rage is due to frustration Syn: fury, anger, wrath, outrage, indignation, temper, spleen, resentment, pique, annoyance, vexation, displeasure; tantrum, bad mood; literary ire, choler 2) …

    Thesaurus of popular words

  • 54rage — [reɪdʒ] noun I 1) [C/U] a very strong feeling of anger Her eyes filled with tears of rage and frustration.[/ex] 2) [U] angry violent behaviour in a public situation • (all) the rage informal very popular[/ex] II verb [I] rage [reɪdʒ] 1) to… …

    Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • 55rage — [[t]reɪdʒ[/t]] n. v. raged, rag•ing 1) angry fury; violent anger 2) a fit of violent anger (sometimes used in combination): a flight attendant attacked, the unfortunate victim of air rage[/ex] 3) fury or violence of wind, waves, fire, disease,… …

    From formal English to slang

  • 56rage — ra|ge vb., r, de, t (komme ved; rode, berøre, skrabe; barbere); rage frem; rage op; rage uklar …

    Dansk ordbog

  • 57Rage — die Rage (Mittelstufe) ugs.: Wut, großer Ärger Beispiel: Seine Worte haben mich in Rage gebracht. Kollokation: in Rage geraten …

    Extremes Deutsch

  • 58rage — 1. n. the current fad; an irresistible fad. (Often with all. Old but recurrent.) □ Get a haircut like mine! It’s all the rage! □ One rage after another. Can’t I find something that will stay the same for a while? 2. in. to party; to celebrate.… …

    Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • 59rage — [13] Rage is a close relative of rabies. It comes via Old French rage from Vulgar Latin *rabia, an alteration of Latin rabiēs ‘madness, frenzy, fury’ (from which English gets rabies). (French rage still means ‘rabies’ as well as ‘anger’.) Cf.⇒… …

    Word origins

  • 60rage — n. & v. n. 1 fierce or violent anger. 2 a fit of this (flew into a rage). 3 the violent action of a natural force (the rage of the storm). 4 (foll. by for) a a vehement desire or passion. b a widespread temporary enthusiasm or fashion. 5 poet.… …

    Useful english dictionary