Word of the Day for Friday, May 27, 2011
dudgeon \DUH-juhn\, noun:
A state or fit of intense indignation; resentment; ill humor -- often used in the phrase "in high dudgeon."
When the conservatives challenge the liberals about the B.O.'s (lack of) accomplishments, they always go into a state of high dudgeon!
--Spy Maker, JSA's Blog
Higgins was so frustrated by such a basic error that he stormed out of the arena for the mid-session interval in high dudgeon.-- Phil Yates, "Stevens begins to feel pressure as Swail stages customary revival", Times (London), April 29, 2000
This woman is forever in a state of spiritual high dudgeon, and a list of her dislikes is as long as the Omaha phone book.-- Jim Harrison, The Road Home
What you see, they reckon, is all there is: a media star of fading allure--and shortening temper, if his dudgeon over a television soap-opera satire about him called "How was I, Doris?" (a reference to his fourth wife) is anything to go by.-- "Gerhard Schröder, embattled chancellor", The Economist, September 18, 1999
The origin of dudgeon is unknown.
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