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Definition of cross adjective from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

cross

adjective
 
/krɒs/
 
/krɔːs/
(especially British English)
(comparative crosser, superlative crossest)
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  1. cross (with somebody) annoyed or quite angry
    • I was cross with him for being late.
    • Please don't get cross. Let me explain.
    Synonyms angryangrymad indignant cross irateThese words all describe people feeling and/​or showing anger.angry feeling or showing anger:
    • Please don’t be angry with me.
    • Thousands of angry demonstrators filled the square.
    mad [not before noun] (informal, especially North American English) angry:
    • He got mad and walked out.
    • She’s mad at me for being late.
    Mad is the usual word for ‘angry’ in informal American English. In British English, the phrase ‘go mad’ means ‘become very angry’: Dad’ll go mad when he sees what you’ve done. ‘Go mad’ can also mean ‘go crazy’ or ‘get very excited’.
    indignant feeling or showing anger and surprise because you think that you or somebody else has been treated unfairly:
    • She was very indignant at the way she had been treated.
    cross (especially British English, rather informal) rather angry or annoyed:
    • I was quite cross with him for being late.
    This word is often used by or to children.
    irate very angry:
    • irate customers
    • an irate letter
    Irate is not usually followed by a preposition: She was irate with me/​about it.
    Patterns
    • angry/​mad/​indignant/​cross about/​at something
    • angry/​cross with somebody (for doing something)
    • angry/​mad/​indignant/​cross that
    • to get angry/​mad/​cross
    • to make somebody angry/​mad/​cross
    Extra Examples
    • I'm going to get very cross before long.
    • It really makes me cross to see people dropping litter in the street.
    • She was very cross at the way she'd been treated.
    • If you don't do as you're told I shall get very cross.
    • He was so cross he couldn't speak.
    Topics Feelingsc2
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverbs
    • be
    • feel
    • look
    adverb
    • extremely
    • fairly
    • very
    preposition
    • about
    • at
    • for
    See full entry
    Word Originlate Old English (in the sense ‘monument in the form of a cross’): from Old Norse kross, from Old Irish cros, from Latin crux.
See cross in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
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adjective
 
 
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