Wrathful

//ˈɹɒθfəl//

Synonyms for "wrathful" (45 found)

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Related word relations

OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.

4 relation types

derived

2 entries

derived from

1 entries

related to

2 entries

similar

3 entries

Translations

16 translations across 9 languages.

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Bulgarian

2 entries
  • гневен adj (possessed of great wrath)
  • разгневен adj (possessed of great wrath)

French

1 entries
  • courroucé adj (possessed of great wrath)

Georgian

2 entries
  • მრისხანე adj (possessed of great wrath)
  • შმაგი adj (possessed of great wrath)

German

2 entries
  • erzürnt adj (possessed of great wrath)
  • zornig adj (possessed of great wrath)

Manx

3 entries
  • corree adj (possessed of great wrath)
  • fargagh adj (possessed of great wrath)
  • jymmoosagh adj (possessed of great wrath)

Norwegian

1 entries
  • olm adj (possessed of great wrath)

Polish

1 entries
  • gniewny adj (possessed of great wrath)

Russian

3 entries
  • гне́вный adj (possessed of great wrath)
  • разгне́ванный adj (possessed of great wrath)
  • рассе́рженный adj (possessed of great wrath)

Spanish

1 entries
  • furioso adj (possessed of great wrath)

Sample sentences

3 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

As when in mighty multitudes bursts out / sedition, and the wrathful rabble rave; / rage finds them arms; stones, firebrands fly about.

Source: tatoeba (6783716)

I will execute great vengeance on them with wrathful rebukes; and they shall know that I am Yahweh, when I shall lay my vengeance on them.

Source: tatoeba (8296637)

There were many kinds of early Christians. Some sects never made it to the present time. One of them was the Ebionites, from the Hebrew "ebyonim" for poor. They revered Jesus' supposed brother James the Just, but rejected the missionary Paul of Tarsus. They believed that Mary was not a virgin and that Jesus was adopted by God. The Ebionites were vegetarians. There were many other extinct sects of Christianity. At that time, the distinction between Jews and Christians was not really clear-cut. Another sect that is extinct today is the Marcionites. Marcion of Sinope (circa 85-160 CE) wrote books that did not survive to the present day; one book that he wrote was The Antitheses. Unlike the Ebionites who still followed Jewish Law and thought that Jesus was human, not God, the Marcionites rejected Jewish Law and thought that Jesus was God, not human. The Marcionites believed that there were 2 gods, the Creator God of the Jews and the God of Jesus. Jesus was the God of mercy and love; he was to save people from the wrathful Creator God. "Docetism" is the term used for thinking that Jesus was a phantasm that appeared human. Marcionites believed that Jesus was not born into this world. Their canon was something like the New Testament, but more compact, and phrases that Marcion thought were scribes' earlier modifications had been elided.

Source: tatoeba (10726729)

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.