Learn English Vocabulary - 44 New Phrases

70,065 views ・ 2022-08-23

Rachel's English


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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He was incensed.
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Livid.
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He was on the warpath.
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There are so many really interesting and colorful ways to say ‘mad’.
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Let’s level up your vocabulary today by learning 44 words and phrases to use instead
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of ‘mad’.
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This list is packed with idioms, we’ll cover British English expressions, American English
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expressions, and I have no doubt that after this video you’ll be able to express yourself
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with more sophistication.
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Be sure to download my Sounds of American English cheat sheet, it’s free, it’s an
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illustrated reference guide for you for all the American English sounds, including the
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phonetic symbols you need to know.
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Link here and in the video description.
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Probably the most common and obvious word you can use instead of ‘mad’ is ‘angry’.
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Yesterday, my two sons kept acting up, misbehaving, and I got really angry.
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‘Angry’ is fun because you can use it in ways that don’t describe a person.
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You could describe the water during a storm as being angry, or a cut, bite or wound on
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your skin as being angry: red, inflamed.
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There’s ‘upset’, also common and straightforward.
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My husband was upset that I didn't tell him I’d be home late.
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He was mad.
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Upset can also mean sad.
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She was really upset when she didn’t pass the choir audition.
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Now, here’s a level up vocabulary word.
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Apoplectic.
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How do you say that?
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æp ə, æp ə ˈplɛk tɪk.
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It helps to break it down syllable by syllable and think about stress.
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ˌæp ə, ˌæp ə, ˈplɛk tɪk, ˈplɛk tɪk.
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ˌæp əˈplɛk tɪk.
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Really, really mad.
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Extremely angry.
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This comes from the noun ˈæp əˌplɛk si, which means a stroke, a blockage of a blood
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vessel leading to the brain, which can result in paralysis, speech difficulties, and even death.
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ˌæp əˈplɛk tɪk.
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The teacher was ˌæp əˈplɛk tɪk when she found out there had been cheating on the
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test.
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I’d like to offer a quick thanks to all my supporters here on YouTube who joined my
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Youtube membership.
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You special badges to make your comments pop, early release of videos when available, access
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to members-only posts and videos, and the top tier gets a free monthly audio lesson.
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Thank you!
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Click JOIN to learn more.
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Sometimes when people are mad, they lose their temper.
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Have you heard this phrase before?
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Lose control in anger.
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Some people get mad and you just see that they’re really mad, you can tell but they’re
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not fully expressing it.
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And then sometimes, boom!
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People express it and they lose their temper.
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They yell, they throw stuff.
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Now we’re going to do a bunch of idioms that begin with B. First, bent out of shape.
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It’s going to be pretty common here to drop the T in 'bent’ because it comes
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after an N, before a vowel.
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The T in ‘out’ is a Flap T, and the V sound in ‘of’ is probably dropped.
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So BENTtt Outtt Of Shape, there’s a good chance you’ll hear that ‘ben-ou-dah-shape’
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Bent out of shape means, literally, bent in a shape other than the one that’s normal
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or desired.
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I couldn’t fit the pieces together because one got bent out of shape.
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But here, as an idiom, it means angry, mad.
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This is what we do when we get mad and yell at someone.
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For example, I got in a fender bender. This means a really minor car accident, and the
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woman totally bit my head off.
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She was so bent out of shape.
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Now, with ‘blow’, we have several nouns we can use to make phrases that mean really
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mad.
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Blow a fuse.
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A fuse is something that melts and breaks an electrical circuit if the current goes
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above a safe level.
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For example, if you’re running your microwave, your blender and your hairdryer all on the
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same outlet, first, you're an amazing multi-tasker, and second of, you’re probably going to
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blow a fuse, and have to reset your breaker.
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A person blows their fuse when they lose their temper.
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We also have ‘blow a gasket’.
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This is just like blow a fuse.
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A gasket helps seal a joint to make it watertight.
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My son blew a gasket when he found out our trip to Disney was canceled due to Covid.
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You could also say, he blew his top off.
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Got so mad, lost his temper.
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Another great word is ‘boiling’.
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We all know what a pot of water looks like and you can imagine that’s
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how you feel inside when you’re mad.
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When my kid pushed another kid at the playground, I was boiling.
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By the way, I feel like I’m making my kids sound terrible here, they’re not, but this
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just happens to be a video on ways to say I’m mad.
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Most of the time, they make me very, very happy.
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A related one here is ‘makes my blood boil’.
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This is something that makes you really mad.
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Pretty much everything in politics makes my blood boil.
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This next one has a couple of different meanings.
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It can mean mad, angry: my boss was beside himself when John didn’t show up for work
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today.
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But it can also mean agitated, really worried; She was beside herself when she couldn’t
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get a hold of her son.
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But it can also mean really happy.
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When he found out he got the scholarship, he was just beside himself.
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Cross.
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Now this one is British.
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We don’t really use this in American English.
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I was really cross with her for not waiting for me after school.
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This one is more mild and not all that common, but you'll also see the word ‘displeased’.
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My mom was displeased with my grades last semester.
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Now, if someone is more than displeased, if they’re really really mad, they’re enraged.
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Full of rage.
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He was enraged when he found out he was passed over for the promotion.
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That means he didn’t get it!
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Also, outraged.
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So angry.
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The faculty were outraged at the changes to their health insurance.
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Another idiom, fit to be tied.
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We’re not actually going to tie anyone up here, but you can imagine someone is so angry
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that you’re worried they might do something crazy or hurt someone.
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And you might want to tie that person up.
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The school administration was fit to be tied over the senior prank.
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Two other ways to describe being so mad you lose your temper is flying off the handle
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and flipping your lid.
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The teacher flipped her lid when she found out no one did their homework.
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She chewed us out.
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To chew someone out.
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This describes what you might do when you are mad.
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It means to reprimand someone.
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You lazy kids need to start doing your homework if you care about your future!
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Wow, she said that?
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Yeah, she totally flew off the handle.
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Foaming at the mouth means literally, foamy saliva coming out of your mouth, but it also
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means, really, really mad and has nothing to do with saliva.
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He was foaming at the mouth when he found out about her affair.
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He was fuming.
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I love this one too.
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Fuming.
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So mad.
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We already went over enraged, full of rage.
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We also have furious, full of fury, which is another way to say rage and a related word,
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‘infuriating’.
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It is infuriating when you don’t follow the rules.
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It just makes me furious.
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We had several phrases with ‘blow’, now we have several with ‘go’ – again these
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mean to lose your temper.
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To be so mad.
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Go ballistic.
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Ballistics is the study of projectiles like bullets or bombs.
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He went ballistic when he thought they were overcharging him.
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Go off the deep end.
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He went off the deep end when they accused him of cheating.
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This can also mean an event in mental health when you lose control, you’re acting really
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strange, not yourself.
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Ok now this one involves a cuss word.
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Go apeshit.
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She went apeshit when she found out I quit my job.
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This one can also mean really, really excited, so happy.
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He went apeshit when he found out they were having a boy.
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Go off on someone.
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This is when you yell at someone because you’re really mad at them.
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Oh I’m so mad at her.
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I’m going to go off on her if I ever see her again.
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Go through the roof.
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A similar mental image to blow your top off.
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They’re going to go through the roof when they find out you skipped school.
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There’s also hit the roof.
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Same idea.
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They hit the roof when they found out the rent was going up by more than $300.
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You might also hear ‘hot under the collar’.
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Some shirts have a collar.
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If you're hot under your collar, ooh, you might blow your top!
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Our next three, great vocabulary words: incensed, irate, irked.
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Incensed and irate are both really mad.
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Irked is only sort or mad, more like annoyed.
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I’m a little irked that she didn’t call me back.
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That’s different from: “I’m incensed.
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She continues to disrespect me.”
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She was irate that her Apple watch was stolen at the gym.
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This next one, also a great vocabulary word, livid.
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The word has two meanings; one is bluish in color.
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But the second is furiously angry.
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I like to think of someone so mad that their face turns blue.
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They said I have to redo this whole project; I am livid that they didn’t let me know sooner.
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Three phrases with lose: lose it, lose your cool, and, less common, lose your rag.
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When he stood up my friend on their third date, I lost my cool, I lost it.
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To stand someone up is to not show up.
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Let’s say you and I are supposed to meet for coffee tomorrow.
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I go, I get coffee, I wait at the coffee shop for 30 minutes, you never show up.
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You stood me up.
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Lose your rag.
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We hired movers, and they broke my grandmother’s serving bowl.
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I lost my rag.
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Another phrase you can use for someone who is really mad is to say they are ‘on the warpath’.
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Try to avoid Kristin today.
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She just got fired and she’s on a warpath.
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Now, this is one I use a lot: I’m pissed.
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That really pisses me off.
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Now pissed, in British English, can mean drunk.
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In American English, it means mad.
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I get really pissed when someone gives me advice I didn’t ask for.
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It pisses me off when people try to tell me what to do.
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An idiom: seeing red.
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Can’t you just picture it?
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You’re so mad, you’re seeing red.
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“Was she mad?”
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“Oh, totally.
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She was seeing red.”
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Seething, an excellent vocabulary word.
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You know how we talked about someone losing their temper, expressing their anger?
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This is the opposite.
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You’re so mad, but you don’t express it, but everyone can tell.
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You’re just seething.
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This next one.
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Less intense, but you’re still mad.
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You’re sore.
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She was kind of sore at us because we went out for drinks after work and didn’t invite her.
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Also, another definition, if you do a really hard workout, afterwards, your muscles might
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be sore.
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Up in arms.
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This can mean protesting, but it can also just mean upset about something; upset and
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letting people know.
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The students were up in arms about the new testing rules.
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I absolutely love teaching you English here on YouTube and Facebook.
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Keep your learning going now with this video, and don’t forget to subscribe with notifications
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on here on YouTube or to follow my page on Facebook.
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If you want to go beyond learning and move into training, check out my online courses
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at RachelsEnglishAcademy.com where I take you step by step, through everything you need
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to know to master spoken English and develop your American voice.
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I’d love to have you as my student.
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That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
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