Learn English phrases: frustration and anger

Nov 7, 2025‱Channel
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To Fluency
To Fluency

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Video Details

Published6 months ago
Duration2:58
Video IDsK5DqgmxvnA
Languageen
CategoryEntertainment
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeYouTube Short

Performance Metrics

Views2.3K
Likes71
Comments5
Engagement Rate3.33%
Likes per 100 views3.11
Comments per 1K views2.19

Description

đŸ˜€ Learn English Phrases to Express Frustration and Anger Full lesson here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nq5LHchCQr8 In this lesson, you’ll learn natural English phrases that people use when they feel frustrated, angry, or simply fed up. These are very common in both British and American English. đŸ”„ I’ve had enough Used when you can’t tolerate something any longer. → I’ve had enough of this noise. → I’ve had enough of this weather. It can sound serious depending on your tone — or playful, depending on the context. 😠 You’re really annoying me A direct way to say that something or someone is irritating you. → You’re really annoying me. → It really annoys me when people are late. 🇬🇧 I’m fed up with... / đŸ‡ș🇾 I’m sick of... Both express frustration or boredom. → I’m fed up of waiting. → I’m fed up of always having to wait here. → I’m sick of waiting all this time. 😡 To lose it Means to lose control of your emotions, especially anger. → He completely lost it when he found out the bad news. → I completely lost it when my phone broke. đŸ˜© I can’t deal with this right now Used when you’re overwhelmed or too stressed to continue. → I can’t deal with this right now. And a casual American version: → I just can’t. If you’ve ever had enough of learning boring English, share this post with a friend who loves natural phrases!

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