Yes, there is such a word. It relates to "wrath" in that it can be defined as "wrathful" - also angry, violent, turbulent.
The girls said she read the Grapes of Wroth, but she really meant The Grapes of Wrath.
The word "Wroth" with Capital W is a person Lady Wroth for example.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lady_Mary_WrothThe word "wroth" means angry.John was wroth over the business failure.wroth   [rawth, roth or, especially Brit., rohth] Show IPAadjective1.angry; wrathful (usually used predicatively): He was wroth tosee the damage to his home.2.stormy; violent; turbulent: the wroth sea.
The word "wrath" in Japanese is 怒り (ikari).
the latin word for wrath is furor, meaning rage.
Henry Wroth died in 1671.
William Wroth died in 1642.
William Wroth was born in 1576.
Wroth means "full of anger", or "wrathful".
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The word wrath can be used as a noun. Examples: "Feel my never-ending wrath." "The guilty man faced the judge's wrath."
The man's fiery wrath killed the woman's dog.
The wrath of Tutenkhamun thundered down upon his cowering servants.