Source : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Infuriate \In*fu"ri*ate\, a. [It. infuriato, p. p. of infuriare.
See {Infuriate}, v. t.]
Enraged; rading; furiously angry; infuriated. --Milton.
Inflamed beyond the most infuriate wrath. --Thomson.
Infuriate \In*fu"ri*ate\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Infuriated}; p.
pr. & vb. n. {Infuriating}] [It. infuriato, p. p. of
infuriare; pref. in- (L. in) + furia fury, L. furia. See
{Fury}.]
To render furious; to enrage; to exasperate.
Those curls of entangled snakes with which Erinys is
said to have infuriated Athemas and Ino. --Dr. H. More.
Source : WordNet®
infuriate
v : make furious [syn: {exasperate}, {incense}]