The same as English: rage.
Rage, page, age, sage, gauge, stage, rampage, Paige,age, page, rage, stage,Rage
rabia.
Furor.
激怒 Gekido
age assuage backstage cage engage enrage gauge Mage offstage onstage page Paige phage rage restage upstage sage wage
rage
Neither. Rage is a noun. ...and a verb. He flew into a rage. Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
If you mean a guillotine, it's a beheading machine developed by the French and first used on April 25, 1792. It was particularly the rage during the French Revolution.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guillotine
I have got a toothache is " j'ai mal aux dents " in French. If this is a severe, painful crisis, you would say " j'ai une rage de dents ".
to have a tooth ache is 'avoir mal aux dents' in French. When you have a very acute 'mal de dents', you call it 'une rage de dents'
fox tail
Panthers rage because they have only a sense of rage
No, rage is a noun. Rage can be used as a verb, for example.. To rage against the dying of the light.
victim of rage
There is no prefix which means rage.
"Fromage" is pronounced as "fro-mahzh" in French. The "rage" part is pronounced like "rahzh" with a soft "zh" sound at the end.
The Lady of Rage is 5' 6 1/2".