This event was a source of embarrassment and infuriation on one level and complete perplexity on another. |
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The entire film is reduced to an unsatisfying gimmick, and one is left somewhere between perplexity and infuriation. |
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De Gaulle caused Roosevelt more trouble and more infuriation than any other person in the Second World War. |
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Darcy grew calm again, and to her infuriation Lizzy thought she saw him smile ruefully. |
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For a moment, Mr. Steele's face held the expression of infuriation, but this was soon overtaken by a struggle towards neutrality. |
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They seem to unconciously know how to inflict the maximum infuriation on men. |
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For those of you with a strong stomach and a low threshold of infuriation, feel free to read on. |
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Also in 1993 he published Grammar and Style, a book prompted by his infuriation with declining standards of literacy. |
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There are possibly a dozen paintings in the entire book that might hang on a wall without bringing prompt infuriation. |
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Her Louisa alternates between affection and infuriation as Martin bumbles through romantic moments. |
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David gives the performance a slow burn, as George's infuriation with things he cannot control reaches its ultimate breaking point. |
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One's delight at discovering that a personally loved film received well-reasoned praise from one critic turns to infuriation when it is dismissed or minimized by another. |
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When the news of the vote came through, there was a reaction of shock, of realisation that we have come to this, of sadness, frustration and infuriation. |
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On the left, there was infuriation at the perception that the EU serves banks better than it serves its citizens. |
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The recent NHS and civil service strikes show infuriation over pay cuts and job losses is stronger than ever. |
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A few moments of acrimony followed by a chunk of infuriation and a smattering of irritability. |
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When watching a Hollywood movie that has robed itself in the themes and paraphernalia of science, a scientist expects to feel anything from annoyance to infuriation at facts misconstrued or processes misrepresented. |
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So incensed is Elaine by this flouting of convention that she buys her a bra for her birthday, only to find that, to her utter infuriation, Sue Ellen is wearing it with a blazer and nothing else. |
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Zameret also talks of an infuriation at the way the global leadership has failed to tackle the pressing issues of the day, from corporate greed and banking failure to problems like the environment. |
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The recent speculations of postponing the May elections have only added to this infuriation. |
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Another infuriation is the constant swapping between decent and believable digital effects, and B-movie, laughably low-budget efforts. |
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Another point that has also been fueling Mayweather infuriation about the entire Pacquiao thing is the fact that the Filipino boxer is doing business with Bob Arum. |
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This might be to the eternal infuriation of clubs who believe the media should sit back and await a formal announcement rather than pursuing the story. |
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Infuriation is creeping up my spine at Daniel's stab at martyrdom. |
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