ppl. a. [f. prec. + -ED.]
† a. Grieved, troubled (obs.). b. Provoked to wrath, irate; lit. and fig. c. Irritated, inflamed. d. Flushed as with rage.
c. 1300. Leg. Rood (1871), 124. Þis son of chosdroas euill angerd was.
c. 1340. Richard Rolle of Hampole, Prick of Conscience, 302. Þe prophet was angred, in thoght.
c. 1400. Destr. Troy, XIX. 7994. Achilles was angret angardly sore.
1606. Shaks., Ant. & Cl., II. vi. 21. The angerd ocean fomes.
c. 1830. Tennyson, Madeline, iii. The flush of angerd shame. Ibid. (1830), Dream Fair Wom., 255. Those dragon eyes of angerd Eleanor.
1878. B. Taylor, Deukalion, I. vi. 47. Every nightly crag Is angered with the glory.
1881. Daily News, 11 Aug., 2/2. A somewhat angered controversy took place across the table.
1883. Harpers Mag., Feb., 483/1. The young man became angered.