1
general::
extreme anger
fury
a very strong feeling of anger:
• The judge sparked fury when he freed a man who had attacked three women. • The decision caused fury among local people.
rage
a very strong feeling of anger that is difficult to control or is expressed very suddenly or violently:
• When we accused him of lying, he flew into a rage (= became very angry very suddenly ) . • Brown killed his wife in a jealous rage.
outrage
extreme anger and shock because you think something is unfair or wrong:
• The racist comments caused outrage in India and Britain.
wrath
formal extreme anger:
• Pietersen was the next to incur the wrath of the referee (= make him angry )
Longman-Thesaurus
3
general::
noun ADJ. cold | controlled, inner, pent-up He growled with barely controlled fury. VERB + FURY be beside yourself with, be shaking with, feel He was beside himself with fury. I had never felt such fury before. | vent He vented his fury on a telephone box. | arouse, drive sb to, provoke That kind of treatment would drive anyone to fury. The decision to close the factory has provoked fury. FURY + VERB mount, rise | drain, fade His face and body sagged as the fury drained from him. PREP. in (a) ~ She turned on him in a fury. | with ~ He reacted with cold fury | ~ against Her fury against him rose. | ~ at He kicked the tree in fury at his own stupidity. PHRASES turn your fury on sb I hoped she wouldn't turn her fury on me.
Oxford Collocations Dictionary