Wrathful in a sentence as an adjective

That is why she is depicted in those wrathful forms.

In this case, it feels like the title is certainly acidic, bitter, wrathful, etc. -- but I don't think it was intended to be linkbait.

At the bottom is the most wrathful form of Vajrayogini, naked and all black with fangs, an intense, fiery aura, standing on a corpse.

As a log from a pyre, burnt at both ends and fouled in the middle, serves neither for firewood in the village nor for timber in the forest, so is such a wrathful man.

The discussion on how God can be both loving and wrathful comes up often and is often hard to end on a satisfactory answer, even though those attributes are necessary for each other.

But it shows that even 2,000 years ago, the tendency of the human species to destroy the planet was already clear:"But the nations became wrathful, and your own wrath came, and the appointed time came...to bring to ruin those ruining the earth.

I feel business-driven, cognition-altering escape palaces are wrathful, detrimental environments.

He's the last in the lineage of those who do this within this specific group:"“For the Kulung, the ethnic group that lives in Saadi, for them to be able to go onto the cliff and touch the honeycomb and the honey, you have to be selected by this wrathful forest spirit called Rongkemi through a special dream.

Æfter ðám wordum wyrm yrre cwóm After those words the wrathful wyrm came, atol inwitgæst óðre síðe awful cruel visitor a second time, fýrwylmum fáh fíonda níosian with hostile, gleaming flood of fire to seek his foes láðra manna·sydaudio líg ýðum for· the hated humans; the flame came forth in waves, born bord wið rond· byrne ne meahte burned shield to the boss; the byrnie could not geongum gárwigan géoce gefremman to the young spear- fighter lend support ac se maga geonga maéges scyld but the young man, under his kinsman's shield elne geéode þá his ágen wæs courageously advanced, when his own was glédum forgrunden.

Wrathful definitions

adjective

vehemently incensed and condemnatory; "they trembled before the wrathful queen"; "but wroth as he was, a short struggle ended in reconciliation"

See also: wroth wrothful