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Answer:
ANGER
Possible Questions:
Wrath
Rage
Irritate
Fury
Dander
Tick off
Choler
Provoke
Passion
A deadly sin
Indignation
Hot stuff
Incense
Infuriation
Spleen
High dudgeon
Infuriate
Get one's goat
Tee off
Rankle
Resentment
One of the deadly sins
Umbrage
Hot temper
Hot blood
Fire up
Ire
Enrage
Pique condition?
Deadly sin
Inflame
Outrage
Dudgeon
Rile up
Heat
Strong emotion
Steam up
Red state?
Bring to a boil
Steamed state
Get one's dander up
Rile
Emotional heat
One of the seven deadly sins
Blood pressure raiser
The Hulk's catalyst
Management course subject?
Get really hot
Displeasure
Destructive emotion
Burning sensation?
Ruffle one's feathers
Incensement
Get hot
Emotion
Cause of an outburst
Reason for the silent treatment
Sorehead's emotion
Psychologist's concern
Make furious
Make blood boil
Bile
"A short madness": Horace
Subject of a management course?
Subject of a management class
Ruffled feathers
Outburst cause
Osborne's "Look Back in ___"
Opposite of "please"
One might take classes to manage it
Management target
It may need some management
Feeling of hostility
Displease
Cause of cross words
___ management class (therapy session)
___ management
What steam coming out of the ears may signify in a cartoon
What Horace called "a short madness"
Temper tantrum trigger
Subject of a certain management class
Snit fit
Second of the five stages of grief
Reaction to a snub, maybe
Provocation result
Osborne's Look Back in ____
One of the five stages of grief
Management course topic
Management class topic?
Major indignation
It may need management
It makes you hot
It makes Bruce Banner turn into the Hulk
Irate feeling
Inspire wrath
Hot flash
Hot emotion
Get riled up
Fourth deadly sin
Focus of a management course?
Farrell's "My Days of ___"
Extreme displeasure
Emotion that may need "management"
Cause to blow up
Anagram for range
"Touch me with noble ___": King Lear
"Don't Look Back in ___" (Oasis hit)
"Brief madness," to Petrarch
"A momentary madness," per Horace
"___ is momentary madness . . . ": Horace