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Discover Ludwig'fuming mad' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe a person who is extremely angry. Example sentence: After getting cut off in traffic, John drove away fuming mad.
Exact(7)
"If you were upset and fuming mad, I might say, 'I know.
"I [was] fuming mad," she said.
The book's illustration of this event made me fuming mad when I was roughly nine.
But even then, I'm like, you gotta be pretty comfortable with your sexuality to be OK with a girlfriend wanting to take pictures of you in your panties in the bathroom, and then I think of the 2009 interviews Lita did that got some gay folks fuming mad and pointing the homophobic finger when she said that Joan Jett's fans are gay, and her fans are straight.
If you're fuming mad at another student, do whatever you need to do to control your temper - listen to some calming music, eat a big meal, or perform some vigorous exercise, for starters.
As noted by New York Magazine earlier this year, Mr. Obama's top aides at times characterized their boss as "furious," "incensed," "outraged," "enraged," "fuming mad," "seething," and "irate".
Similar(49)
You could start fuming or getting mad at this: "How dare she treat me like that!" But, really, almost all of the time, what is going on with that individual is dictating her behavior, not you.
"I am fuming," fumes Matt Dixon.
"I'm fuming," she said.
mad, mad, mad world.
"Yes, he was fuming," Terry admitted.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com