Furious in a sentence as an adjective

No offense meant, but "our pace is often fast and furious.

My former boss was furious, the HR person was furious.

I used to work at Goldman's and I can tell you that they will be absolutely furious about this.

As a user of that site I'd be annoyed; as an editor of that site I would be furious.

Ive used C++ for half a lifetimeits a hopelessly broken language. There are tons of things about it that just make me furious.

Ortiz specifically has brought other cases that have made me furious.

" No furious anger, no outrage, just a simple "uh well **** happens, its unfortunate.

My inbox was full of furious customers who were observing, correctly, that I was 8 hours into an outage.

> "Most [all, actually] of the women I've talked to about this are furious with her over how badly this portrays women.

I am yet again disappointed in them, and I am furious at how broken our patent system for software and technical innovation.

His proposal has instigated a furious debate in India, with television channels even assembling panels to discuss it.

I would be furious about Cloudflare writing a details-thin "postmortem," headlining it as a postmortem, analyzing my initial statement to customers in it, then getting it on HN before DNS caches are even cold from the incident itself.

Furious definitions

adjective

marked by extreme and violent energy; "a ferocious beating"; "fierce fighting"; "a furious battle"

See also: ferocious fierce savage

adjective

marked by extreme anger; "the enraged bull attached"; "furious about the accident"; "a furious scowl"; "infuriated onlookers charged the police who were beating the boy"; "could not control the maddened crowd"

See also: angered enraged infuriated maddened

adjective

(of the elements) as if showing violent anger; "angry clouds on the horizon"; "furious winds"; "the raging sea"

See also: angry raging tempestuous wild