Being mad is never uttered; it is shown and manifested. anger can be better said and uttered.
The difference is we don't say "angry at." We say mad at or angry with. You can be angry with a person or their actions, you can be angry at a situation.
If you want to say "are you angry in the phil" you must say "galit ka ba?" galit = mad or angry, ka = you, ba = can mean are you or depends on how it is use.
muy loco is very mad in spanish :) (mad as in mad hatter or insane) Angry is enojado.
You can say "ẹ wá dara" in Yoruba, which translates to "I am angry."
Uh, not a particularly good example of analogy here. Is there as difference between "mad" and "angry"? I'd say they are the same thing, so the word we are looking for is "stream". But some might think that "mad" is like "angry" but moreso, in which case the word is "river", or that angry is like mad but moreso, in which case the word is "trickle". And some would say that "mad" means insane, which is a state of mind but a different one, in which case we are looking for a word for a topographical feature which is not a flow of water, possibly "hill".
feargach (if you mean angry)far-ug-ukhbuile, mire (as in crazy)
"I am mad at you" means that I am angry at something you have said or done. "I am mad with you" means basically the same thing in American English, but is less often used. In British English, "mad" means insane or crazy.
This is how you say mad in the two main languages in Papua New Guinea: Pidgin/Tok Pisin: longlong Motu: Ma ta xtiB: it depends. if you mean mad as in 'angry' i.e "i'm mad because... then you'd use 'belhat'..mi belhat (im mad/angry)..if you mean crazy/insane as in "you're mad/ you're out of your head.." then you'd use 'longlong' to describe insanity.
As in "insane" it would be "loco". As in "angry" it would be "enojado" or "enfadado".
It means to be mad at one for a long time, i suggest that when you meet the person again you are mad at than you should say sorry and forgive them/him/her and... okay... I'm done. in the grudge movie, the ghost goes around killing people because she is angry with her killer and avenged on many innocent victims (her killer is dead, so who is there to be avenged?)
People say they feel like a monster when they are mad or angry with themselves. Proudly Made By, Daniel Neville.
In Assamese, you can say "মই ৰাগী" (moi ragi) to express that you are mad or angry. Another way to convey the same feeling is "মই খৰাপ লাগিছে" (moi khorap lagise), which translates to "I feel bad" or "I am upset."