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It makes my blood boil when I think of what they've done!
It makes my blood boil when he talks like that.
"Really, it makes my blood boil to look at you.
I tell you it makes my blood boil just to think of it."
"Just thinking about it makes my blood boil."
Apple is so anti-consumer, it makes my blood boil.
Yet, I also know how intimidating it is to have a tailgater behind; it makes my blood boil.
Gods, it makes my blood boil just to think about those pointy-eared know-it-alls breathing the same air I do.
He was appalled by tort-reform proposals to limit damages: "It makes my blood boil.
"When I think how many times the Bittles have been guests in this house, it makes my blood boil.
It makes my blood boil, Mistress Blythe.
It makes my blood boil that Labour have opened the door to this privatisation of state education and exploitation of young people for profit.
In fact it makes my blood boil when I think of the plain exploitation of this album, but hopefully it never sold many copies.
"It makes my blood boil," the mayor said, "when people say, 'He speaks hick."'
Anger Triggers It Makes My Blood Boil!
Sparrow is -- "It makes my blood boil when I think about it," said Bonnett.
It makes my blood boil when I hear such-" "You are changing the subject," I warned, knowing his propensity to lecture on this topic.
It makes my blood boil when I think of a creature being enslaved, robbed of freedom, beaten, starved and forced 106 to labor for some jumped-up villain.
"It makes my blood boil to see attempts to smear my son and drag him into the mud," the California Democrat said in a statement released at his office.
John Eglinton, frowning, said, waxing wroth: --Upon my word it makes my blood boil to hear anyone compare Aristotle with Plato.
In 1842 he began studying some abolitionist literature, and stated, "It makes my blood boil within me to reflect upon the injustice, cruelty, and oppression of the rulers of the people.
"It makes my blood BOIL the way the ICC are being snooty about Ireland gaining Test status," says Nick Lezard.
The later history of the Daily Express suggests not: when the Express became hostile in the 1920s, Younger raged "when I think of the large sum of money this office has put into that gutter print it makes my blood boil".
In 1842, in another letter for publication, Smith wrote, "it makes my blood boil within me to reflect upon the injustice, cruelty, and oppression of the rulers of the people," but he continued to preach the importance of upholding the law of the land, which included legalized slavery.