He's ticked off because he's being robbed and humiliated right now, kept down by poverty and the lack of a level playing field. |
This really ticked off Lisa and she turned around without saying anything else except for a groan or a whine or a sigh every once in a while. |
The old man was ticked off in seeing that two kids saw his new invention, mistaking us for some roisterers. |
Measuring motions in this absolute space also required a universal clock, which ticked off the seconds for all the inhabitants of the cosmos. |
Sipping bottled water before the concert in Huntington in March, he ticked off a long list of luminaries with whom he had worked. |
You expect to be ticked off from time to time if you venture your views in public. |