Irate in a sentence as an adjective

The first one was, as you might expect, rather irate.

Jacques is irate at this, and rightly so.

Two months ago when they called back I brought it up again, in a slightly more irate manner.

Ignorance of the law won't help you very much when you're in a room with an irate CBP officer.

The "principled irate male" demographic tends to get upset over the double standard.

"It does not require a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority keen to set brush fires in people's minds.

You paid for a device with X, then they removed X. Understandably the community became somewhat irate.

Many of the developers rooting the devices just wanted to run their own software, but the shadow community would use that result to pirate games.

They spend months doing expensive research, while your product engineers fly from city to city trying to pacify the increasingly irate customers.

From a business standpoint, open-sourcing is a good way to maintain goodwill and shift the onus of administering the service to those who consume it without leaving them out to dry. All your consumers will have to make a decision on whether the cost of running their own service is worth it, which is a much healthier situation than a bunch of irate customers left with no recourse.

The most hilarious one on my phone is a local transit app, which is sadly very useful so I'm keeping it, with an irate developer who uses push notifications to angrily respond to negative reviews in the App store.

They tiptoe around it quite a bit in their amici briefs, but the Supreme Court will eventually get a little irate if you meticulously avoid saying what you're actually petitioning for, so they have committed on paper to positions like:"[Harvard and the peer institutions signing this brief] accordingly urge the Court to interpret \nthe Constitution, consistent with Bakke and Grutter, to \ncontinue to allow educational institutions to structure \nadmissions programs that take account of race and ethnicity as single factors within a highly individualized, \nholistic review process.

Irate definitions

adjective

feeling or showing extreme anger; "irate protesters"; "ireful words"

See also: ireful