In a huff

To walk away or exit in a huff means to angrily walk away or to walk away because you are offended.
Yep, this guy is walking away in a huff.

YouTube / iTunes / Spotify / Radio Public / Pocket Casts / Google Podcasts / Breaker / Overcast

Listen to ArtisanEnglish.jp posts & lesson intros here.



Phrase: In a huff

Has someone ever said something that offended you so much that you walked away from them?

Have you ever been so angry with someone that you could not talk to them anymore, so you just left the situation?

Well, if you have, then you have walked away in a huff.


Exiting in a huff means to walk away angrily or to walk away because you are offended.


The next time your spouse walks away from you because they are angry, the next time you don’t give your son money, and he slams his bedroom door, the next time you walk away from your boss and say, ‘Argh!’, they, he and you are doing something in a huff.


This post is understandable by someone with at least a 7th-grade education (age 12).  

On the Flesch-Kincaid reading-ease test, this post scores 78.  

The easier a passage is to read, the higher the score on a scale of 0 – 100.



Posted

in

by