VIOLENCE vs FURY: NOUN
- Action intended to cause destruction, pain, or suffering.
- Extreme force.
- To outrage; to injure.
- To attack; to murder.
- Ravishment; rape; constupration.
- Injury done to that which is entitled to respect, reverence, or observance; profanation; infringement; unjust force; outrage; assault.
- The quality or state of being violent; highly excited action, whether physical or moral; vehemence; impetuosity; force.
- Synonyms 1 and 2. Passion, fury, flerceness, wildness, rage, boisterousness.
- The unlawful use of physical force.
- An act of aggression (as one against a person who resists)
- In law: Any wrongful act of one person, whereby either he or his instrument of wrong-doing is brought into contact with the limbs or body of another person.
- Ravishment; rape
- Unjust or unwarranted exertion of power; unjust force; force employed against rights, laws, liberty, or the like; outrage; injury; hurt; attack; assault.
- Injury done to anything which is entitled to respect, reverence, or observance; profanation; infringement; violation. See the phrases below.
- Highly excited feeling or action; impetuosity; vehemence; eagerness.
- The state or character of being violent; force; vehemence; intensity.
- Distortion of meaning or intent.
- Extreme or powerful emotion or expression.
- Intense force or great power, as in natural phenomena.
- Behavior or treatment in which physical force is exerted for the purpose of causing damage or injury.
- The property of being wild or turbulent
- A turbulent state resulting in injuries and destruction etc.
- The overcoming or preventing of resistance by exciting fear through display of force.
- Widespread fighting.
- Injustice, wrong.
- An angry or malignant person.
- Strength or violence in action.
- Extreme anger.
- A stormy, turbulent violent woman; a hag; a vixen; a virago; a termagant.
- One of the Parcæ, or Fates, esp. Atropos.
- Pl. (Greek Myth.) The avenging deities, Tisiphone, Alecto, and Megæra; the Erinyes or Eumenides.
- Violent anger; extreme wrath; rage; -- sometimes applied to inanimate things, as the wind or storms; impetuosity; violence.
- Violent or extreme excitement; overmastering agitation or enthusiasm.
- Synonyms Vexation, Indignation, etc. See anger1 and Violence, vehemence, tempestuousness, fierceness, frenzy.
- A thief.
- Hence A minister or a concentrated manifestation of vengeance; an avenging or vengeful personality, principle, or action.
- In classical mythology, one of the avenging deities, called in Greek mythology the Erinyes or, by euphemism, Eumenides, and by the Romans the Furiæ or Diræ, daughters of Earth or of Night, represented as fearful maidens, often winged, and with serpents twined in their hair, clad in dusky garments girdled with red.
- Violent or impetuous action of any kind; vehement manifestation of force; violence.
- Extreme anger or rage; anger or wrath which overrides all self-control; a storm of anger; madness.
- Any of the spirits who pursue and torment the doers of unavenged crimes, identified with the Greek Erinyes.
- A violent disturbance or intense period of activity:
- Violent or frenzied action.
- A fit of anger.
- Violent anger; rage. : anger.
- State of violent mental agitation
- The property of being wild or turbulent
- (classical mythology) the hideous snake-haired monsters (usually three in number) who pursued unpunished criminals
- A feeling of intense anger
- Enthusiasm; inspired or frenzied excitement of the mind.
VIOLENCE vs FURY: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To assault; to injure; also, to bring by violence; to compel.
- N/A
VIOLENCE vs FURY: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To bring by violence; compel.
- To do violence to; assault; injure.
- To infuriate; agitate violently.
VIOLENCE vs FURY: RELATED WORDS
- Abuse, Conflict, Rioting, Assaults, Brutality, Unrest, Violent, Bloodshed, Furiousness, Vehemence, Fierceness, Force, Wildness, Ferocity, Fury
- Indignation, Outrage, Anger, Furiousness, Craze, Wildness, Violence, Delirium, Fierceness, Frenzy, Madness, Hysteria, Vehemence, Ferocity, Rage
VIOLENCE vs FURY: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Aggression, Hostilities, Thuggery, Insurgency, Abuse, Conflict, Rioting, Brutality, Unrest, Violent, Bloodshed, Vehemence, Force, Ferocity, Fury
- Uproar, Furious, Ire, Wrath, Indignation, Outrage, Anger, Craze, Violence, Delirium, Frenzy, Madness, Vehemence, Ferocity, Rage
VIOLENCE vs FURY: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Intimate partner violence typically includes sexual or physical violence, psychological aggression, and stalking.
- Violence is not to be condoned, nor should one call for violence.
- Domestic violence is the most common form of violence against women.
- But no, there is still violence, especially racially targeted violence.
- Threats of violence are common although actual violence is rare.
- On the other hand, retaliatory violence only breeds further violence.
- Sexual Assault, Dating Violence, Domestic Violence or Stalking.
- Violence is preventable, and the normalization of violence produces a sense of hopelessness that threatens individual and collective efforts for violence prevention.
- This position adheres to CSU policies against Sex Discrimination, Sexual Harassment, and Sexual Violence, including Domestic Violence, Dating Violence, and Stalking.
- Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars.
- Jackson responded to fury with more fury by threatening to use the military to enforce the law.
- Residents are responsible to care for their fury friend, and make all future appointments for their fury love one while residing at Country Club.
- Children of any age can participate and make a Night Fury and Light Fury of their very own!
- Fury goes about setting up the Avengers team with Iron Man, an idea which was started when Fury first crossed paths with Captain Marvel.
- The Game Fury Wars Fury Wars Stickman Climb!
- Frankie Donovan The Donovans Unleash Fury: A flurry of melee strikes against an enemy; kills restore your fury and AP but make you exhausted.
- Lightning fury is like a weaker version of Gliding Fury but it allows you to perform another sliding strike and further reposition yourself.
- Dark, dark eyes that held fury, malice, and even more fury this instant than just the moment before.
- Fury of Dracula, and while Fury is almost certainly a much better game, it did have some fascinating features.
- Fury and his cousin Hughie Fury, who was also charged, both denied taking the drug.
VIOLENCE vs FURY: QUESTIONS
- Why do authoritarian regimes seek to provoke violence by provoking violence?
- What is the cycle of violence with respect to domestic violence?
- What does it mean to meet violence with non violence?
- How is aestheticized violence different from gratuitous violence?
- Does violence in the world correct previous violence?
- How can we prevent family violence and domestic violence?
- How does violence lead to more violence in Macbeth?
- What is teen dating violence and intimate relationship violence?
- Does media violence cause violence in children and adults?
- Does returning violence for violence multiplies violence?
- When was the first Hawker Fury built in Yugoslavia?
- Is Michael Keaton playing Nick Fury in more movies?
- What happened to Tyson Fury when he was overweight?
- Can the R9 Fury overclock without voltage adjustments?
- What happened between Tyson Fury and Francesco Pianeta?
- Is the Sapphire R9 Fury Tri-X better than the AMD Radeon r9-fury X?
- What are the campaigns like in Wipeout HD Fury and HD Fury?
- How much will Deontay Wilder and Fury earn from Fury fight?
- Who won Fury vs bocianski fight between Fury and Paul?
- Are Tyson Fury and Paris Fury expecting their seventh child?