Here are some sentences.
I am furious with you for cheating.
The teacher was furious when she read the reports.
I'm so furious with you that I am not answering that!
Many people were furious about the terrorist attack of September 11th.
He had to bolt the door shut before the storm hit.
Furious is a word that means feelings of excessive anger. A furious person will often be red faced, angry, and shouting. "Michelle was furious that Joan had stolen her earrings."
The teacher was furious to see her favourite pupil had not completed his English homework.ORI was furious when I found out my brother had stolen my new phone!
No. For a sentence to contain a direct object, the verb must be transitive (a type of action verb). "Was" is a linking verb, and "furious" is the subject complement. Subject complements and direct objects are not the same thing.
She was 45 minutes late and he was getting furious
"Even though we thought she would be ecstatic she was actually quite furious."
She was so furious that she resorted to defenestration of his things.
The furious man scowled at me for wrecking his yard.
He sliced me with his sword and his unrestrained, furious power.
c. gerorge was furious