In a way that shows anger, rage, or strong displeasure.
From 'angry,' which likely derives from Old Norse 'angr' (sorrow, grief), later shifting to mean anger and rage. The '-ly' suffix creates the adverbial form.
The Old Norse root 'angr' meaning sorrow shows how English borrowed emotional vocabulary from Viking languages during the medieval period when Scandinavian traders and raiders influenced English heavily.
Women's anger pathologized as 'hysteria' or 'shrewishness'; same emotion in men labeled 'passion' or 'justified'. Emotional expression judged through gendered double standard.
Describe anger with contextual neutrality: specify trigger and response. Avoid gendered framing (women 'shrill', men 'forceful') for identical emotional intensity.
["with visible frustration","passionately","with intensity"]
Feminist scholarship on emotion validates women's anger as legitimate political and personal response; recognize anger's role in liberation movements led by women.
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