Fury comes from the Latin 'furax'- meaning thievish or devilish, depending on the case.
T.V. Brown (ad auxillam!)
Masculine: Iratus
Feminie: Irata
Neuter: Iratum
Angry. 'Irate' would be angrily.
Furor
Es iratus.
Furcifer means angry and mad
Angry, irate (female).
The English word "irate" has a Latin root "iratus," meaning angry or enraged.
"Horatia is angry." "Whore- ah- tea- uh ear-ah-tuh est"
Do you mean "fractious"? Fractious describes someone who gets angry easily and then starts fights.
least angry means your not that angry most angry means your very angry
'est' is a verb, in Latin and in French. It means 'he/she/it is'. So in Latin you can say 'coquus iratus est' as in 'the chef is angry', or 'puella pulcher est' as in 'the girl is pretty' or 'she is a pretty girl'. So in short, anywhere where you would usually say 'he/she/it is' in English, you can replace with the Latin word 'est'.
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.
"Are you angry?" (Note: the "you" in this sentence is referring to the plural. Also, this is a question, not a phrase, because of the -ne at the end of "vos," which indicates that it is a question.)
The proper English is "I am angry with you" or "I am angry at you.""In you" means that something is inside of you, not that the person is angry at them.
There is no pronoun.