All 10 Uses of
infuriate
in
Arrowsmith
- He could read Arabic, and he infuriated his fellow chemists by asserting that the Arabs had anticipated all their researches.†
Chpt 2 *
- He had learned from Gottlieb the trick of using the word "control" in reference to the person or animal or chemical left untreated during an experiment, as a standard for comparison; and there is no trick more infuriating.†
Chpt 5
- Her indolent amusement, her manner of treating him as though they were a pair of children making tongues at each other in a railroad station, was infuriating to the earnest young assistant of Professor Gottlieb.†
Chpt 6
- The struggle, in its contrast to the aching sweetness of Leora, had infuriated him.†
Chpt 7
- As a youngster he had a fight or two with ruffling subalterns; once he spent a week in jail; often he was infuriated by discriminations against Jews: and at forty he went sadly off to the America which could never become militaristic or anti-Semitic—to the Hoagland Laboratory in Brooklyn, then to Queen City University as professor of bacteriology.†
Chpt 12
- Then behold the Dr. Martin Arrowsmith who had once infuriated Angus Duer and Irving Watters by his sarcasm on medical standards upholding to a lewdly grinning Bert Tozer the benevolence and scientific knowledge of all doctors; proclaiming that no medicine had ever (at least by any Winnemac graduate) been prescribed in vain nor any operation needlessly performed.†
Chpt 14
- This was infuriating, because none of their rights as American citizens was better established, or more often used, than the privilege of being ill.†
Chpt 16
- It had held a Glad-hand Week, when everybody was supposed to speak to at least three strangers daily, to the end that infuriated elderly traveling salesmen were back-slapped all day long by hearty and powerful unknown persons.†
Chpt 21
- Outside, Schlemihl pressed down the button of the motor horn and held it, producing a demanding, infuriating yawp which made Martin cry, "For God's sake go out and make 'em quit that, will you, and let me alone!†
Chpt 24
- He was cheerful, but never with the reproving and infuriating cheerfulness of an Ira Hinkley.†
Chpt 33
Definition:
-
(infuriate) to make very angry or annoyed