Rampage vs Furious - What's the difference?
rampage | furious |
A course of violent, frenzied action.
* {{quote-book, year=2006, author=
, title=Internal Combustion
, chapter=1 To move about wildly or violently
* 2014 , Ian Black, "
Transported with passion or fury; raging; violent.
* , chapter=22
, title= Rushing with impetuosity; moving with violence.
As a noun rampage
is a course of violent, frenzied action.As a verb rampage
is to move about wildly or violently.As an adjective furious is
transported with passion or fury; raging; violent.rampage
English
* (Running amok)Noun
(en noun)citation, passage=Blast after blast, fiery outbreak after fiery outbreak, like a flaming barrage from within,
Verb
(rampag)Courts kept busy as Jordan works to crush support for Isis", The Guardian , 27 November 2014:
- It is a sunny morning in Amman and the three uniformed judges in Jordan’s state security court are briskly working their way through a pile of slim grey folders on the bench before them. Each details the charges against 25 or so defendants accused of supporting the fighters of the Islamic State (Isis), now rampaging across Syria and Iraq under their sinister black banners and sending nervous jitters across the Arab world.
Derived terms
* go on the rampagefurious
English
Adjective
(en adjective)The Mirror and the Lamp, passage=Not unnaturally, “Auntie” took this communication in bad part. Thus outraged, she showed herself to be a bold as well as a furious virago. Next day she found her way to their lodgings and tried to recover her ward by the hair of the head.}}