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The word "fume" is correct and can be used in written English.
You can use it to describe a situation where someone is emitting an angry or frustrated emotion, or to describe the emission of something else such as smoke. For example: "The angry customer was fuming about the quality of the service."
Exact(54)
It's what you click to experience not your 10 minutes of hate but a multi-directional fume of strong feelings.
Why is it, conservatives fume, that the Internal Revenue Service just so happened to select anti-tax groups for intrusive scrutiny?
Instead, the Tigers fume, the United States lectured them on the futility of their cause, while the British government made them close their office in London.If the Sri Lankan government wants the Tigers to discuss peace, it may have to agree to their pre-talks demands, including the lifting of economic restrictions on Tiger-controlled areas, and a ceasefire.
Even the designers and owners of the Sears Tower did not include the antennae in its announced height (at least not until their 23-year-old record was challenged by the Malaysian structure).In any event, Chicago has little reason to fume over the council's height criteria.
He is physically distant, too, confessing he has "barely crossed the threshold of a private residence in Dubai".[p 10] He longs "for the experience of being made welcome by a family in its domain"[p 149], but considers himself toxic: "I'm like those thin-skinned smoke detectors that screech at the presence of the slightest cooking fume, and if life is to go on, must be shut down"[p 157].
Just as some Americans used to howl about Japan's trade surplus, so now they fume about China's.
Similar(6)
What has been reported from Teflon use is a risk of fumes from overheating pans, giving people temporary flu-like symptoms and sickness – known as polymer-fume fever.
Like most Cubans, he had no car; he biked or walked barefoot, or waited for a fume-spilling bus with that patience and stoicism that calms down stress.
A GAGGLE of protesters in Kathmandu, Nepal's fume-filled capital, want a Himalayan summer to follow the Arab spring.
A throng of mostly small cars hoot and jostle in a race against three-wheeled auto-rickshaws, dilapidated buses, fume-belching lorries and the odd bullock cart.
In the bodegas on upper Broadway Korean shopkeepers sell fume-choked bunches for five bucks, with the implicit promise they won't wilt until midnight and might save your marriage.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com