Some synonyms are:
Exacerbated, antagonized, convulsed, cross, enraged, exacerbated, exasperated, ferocious, fierce, fiery, fuming, furious, galled, hateful, heated, hot, impassioned, incensed, indignant, inflamed, infuriated, irascible, irate, ireful, maddened, outraged, piqued, provoked, raging, riled, sore, splenetic, storming, turbulent, vexed, wrathful.
energetic, frisky, spunky, pugnacious, the list goes on
angry, raging, fuming, infuriated, incensed, enraged, inflamed, vehement
The word furious means when someone or somebody is mad or upset. usually madder
Angry
There are three syllables in the word "furious."
The Fire. Furious = Fiery.
No, the word 'furious' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The noun form of the adjective 'furious' is furiousness.The word 'furious' is the adjective form of the noun fury.
The word furious is an adjective. It means to be extremely raging and full of anger.
He was furious when he found out that someone had stolen his car.
Furious is an adjective meaning extremely angry or livid
No, "furious" is not an adverb. It is an adjective that describes a state of extreme anger or intensity. Adverbs are words that modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs.
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This is a made-up word. It means furious.
Many people were furious about the terrorist attack of September 11th.
The word "furious" doesn't come from Greek at all. It comes from the Latin word "furiosus" meaning "full of rage"
The roots of furious lie in Old French furieus, from Latin furiōsus. Both source word mean rage, madness or fury. This gives us the word fury and it is contained in furious "full of fury". There is a word association with "The Furies" goddesses of vengeance. They were probably personified curses, but possibly they were the personification of as ghosts of the murdered who pursued those they thought responsible for their deaths.