Anger
in sentence
1266 examples of Anger in a sentence
I mean, there would be an advantage to experiencing our emotions inside, you know,
anger
or happiness.
Like we could have punctuated expressions of anger, as in riots.
As a dancer, I know the nine rasas or the navarasas: anger, valor, disgust, humor and fear.
And so you can see, literally, signs of their shock ... signs of their outrage ... signs of their
anger
... and signs of their grief.
Now that very idea, I think, strikes terror in many people, or anger, or anxiety of one sort or another.
That's specifically to diffuse our anger, because supposedly we feel good about ATMs.
This amazingly stupid Jackie Chan film, ruined by us, yes us, the Americans (I'm boiling with anger, ooh, I think I'll jump out that window!), has Chan as a New York cop hunting down a gang, avenging the death of his buddy.
I went to the cinema slightly apprehensive, I came out seething with
anger
at the garbage (passing for a film)I had witnessed.
Caine narrates the proceedings with considerable sly wit and low-keyed sarcasm, but his actual performance is bereft of energy (Caine's shrill bursts of
anger
or frustration seem to come out of nowhere, and he connects with nobody on the screen).
Why is ED portrayed as this large, overbearing imposing figure full of
anger
and hate?
Jack Brooks (Trevor Matthews) is a college student with some severe
anger
issues.
The director was obviously trying to make the movie subjective and different, but it just never gave enough information on what was even really going on, even in the end i was left with a mixture of
anger
and confusion.
Confusion from the lack of plot, and
anger
because i wanted my two dollars back from blockbuster and an 1.5 hours of my life back.
This is the only movie that I can think of where after it ended, I was seething with
anger
at the waste of money and time on the part of myself and everyone involved in making it.
It's also because the captain has a real
anger
problem, and I hate people that act cool, but freak out, out of no where; and he seems to on every episode.
By the way, if the boy's plane crashed in 1980 when he was about 10 years old or so, how could he have forgotten how to speak, and built up so much anger?? Wouldn't he have wanted to get help from the first people he had seen even if it was 14 years later?
Secondly, when Mary's father didn't show up for the dinner, and Paulie helped Mary release her anger, that Mary even said she wished he were dead... Somehow I don't think this is a good message either that you deal with your disappointments through
anger.
He smashes up an FBI squad, and throws two military officers out of a plane in flight, with only a vague report of
anger
at HQ and no punishment at all.
He seems to be a nice boy (if not mentally absent), and is portrayed by Gosling with a complete lack of violence, anger, or agenda (and if you're waiting for him to reveal his sinister side later in the movie, don't waste your time-- it's not that kind of movie).
While part 2 looks pretty incomplete and needed at least another hour (especially since it never gets to Ivan's insane behavior later in life--like killing his son and heir while in a fit of anger).
I felt that I had to get rid of some of my
anger
by writing it off me.
A couple of good scenes (Sarah Miles discovering her son has been peeping at her and confronts him in anger, the pasty-faced lad trying to ensnare Kris Kristofferson to his demise by being extra friendly), but what's the point beyond provoking shock?
As the credits roll you will feel genuine
anger
at having wasted your time on Cameron Diaz's wooden acting and a faltering plot-line.
i don't mind
anger
fueled comedy, but george could have done so much better.
Robert Carlyle fully realises his potential as an actor of supreme mediocrity with only one expression to his repertoire (that of a chronically constipated football hooligan nursing a crippling inferiority complex), which he manages at times to alter slightly by flaring his nostrils and baring a row of skewed yellow teeth (this to indicate anger, tenderness, grief, surprise, horror, hilarity, compassion, etc.)
I remember watching this mini-series the first time in 1984 with a growing sense of
anger
and indignation.
He rarely yelled and went much further in his character rather than reverting to an "in your face anger."
I feel that the eagerness of the filmmaker, maybe even the justifiable anger, didn't allow him to see it clearly from a cinematic point of view.
I felt
anger
just watching that one scene, and how they were so badly made out in the film.
I really don't think it's necessary that I write a review on a movie with a title as derisory as "Snake Island", but even in the abstract confines of its own genre, this hit a new low, so my
anger
must be known.
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