Re: angry with

Originally Posted by
towcats1
Hello.
I have a lovely favorite incredible book by R.A. space here Close no full stop here (A Reference Grammar for Students of English.) In chapter 7.20 (adjectives followed by prepositions) the adjective 'angry' is followed by two prepositions space here - "with sby somebody" and "about stg something".
I found the preposition 'at' in many other reference books. I suppose R.A. space here Close is much more accurate. Is it correct to use this the preposition 'at'?
As always on the forum, we would like you to give us some complete sentences to consider. However, at its most basic level, we can be "angry with/at someone" or "angry about something". You will see examples of "angry at something" (for example, "My brother just seems angry at the whole world right now") but it's less common.
Last edited by GoesStation; 20-Oct-2020 at 21:41.
Reason: Fix a typo.
Remember - if you don't use correct capitalisation, punctuation and spacing, anything you write will be incorrect.