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Discover LudwigThe phrase "have a rage" is grammatically correct and commonly used in spoken and written English.
It means to feel intense anger or fury. Example: After finding out about the betrayal, she had a rage and could barely contain her emotions during the meeting.
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I believe we must have a rage and a belief that it does matter.
"He once said, 'It is not that I am afraid of death, it is that I have a rage toward death,' " said Jaime García Márquez.
Each character will have a "Rage Gage".
He will definitely, definitely have a rage heart attack and die the day they announce a black Bond.
Doesn't that make your blood boil a tad or a lot or so much so you're about to have a rage stroke?
If the child's always wrong, something is wrong your expectations are too high, the child may have a physical or developmental handicap, or you may have a rage problem.
Similar(52)
Instead, they have a raging beast.
Unlike in 1932, Americans today have a raging distrust of Washington, he observed.
Readers have a raging appetite for text on a page, and they are happy to spend money for it.
This feels a bit more low-key than yesterday's build up, but I suppose you can't have a raging Cory Booker every night.
"Soon you have a raging thirst and headache," Honigsbaum says, "and as you slip into delirium, you may believe you are literally burning up".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com