lennox the buff dog .
To be furious. To rage.
The adjective form is furious.
furily is the adverb of fury
The verb form for fury is "fume".
No, it is a noun.
The verb is sped :)
The noun forms of the verb to infuriate are infuriation, and the gerund, infuriating. A related noun form is fury.
Its a fury ornamental kit...
We Are the Fury was created in 1999.
Rage is a synonym for fury.
No, 'the fury of excitement' is not an oxymoron; 'a fury of ennui.' or 'an apathy of excitement' could qualify.
Ed Fury is 6'.
Fury - 1955 Stolen Fury 1-16 was released on: USA: 28 January 1956
No, the noun 'fury' is not a standard collective noun. A collective noun is an informal part of language, any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun. Some examples of the noun 'fury' as a collective noun are a fury of protesters, a fury of hornets, a fury of professional wrestlers, etc.
You can not kill a Fury, as they are immortal.