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Fury

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Possible Answers:

RAGE.

Last seen on: –Vox Crossword Saturday, 2 December 2023
Daily Boston Globe Crossword Sunday, 22 October 2023
Daily Boston Globe Crossword Saturday, 23 September 2023
Daily Boston Globe Crossword Monday, 15 May 2023
USA Today Crossword – May 6 2023
Daily Boston Globe Crossword Thursday, March 2, 2023
Thomas Joseph – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Feb 11 2023
Thomas Joseph – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Jan 23 2023
Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Nov 10 2022

Random information on the term “Fury”:

Fury is a 2001 six issue miniseries about Nick Fury written by Garth Ennis. The series was published under Marvels MAX imprint and featured much harder violence and explicit material than was common at the time which caused some controversy among fans and comic creators. The series takes place outside of main Marvel comics continuity and is interconnected with other series written by Garth Ennis under the Max imprint. It was followed by a prequel and a sequel.

Three issues of the series were published in Germany in 2002 by Panini.

After the end of the Cold War Fury finds himself lost and incapable of enjoying himself like he used to when going to war. S.H.I.E.L.D. has tried to put him into a non-combat position and he feels bored and unneeded in the modern age.

Fury’s luck begins to turn when he has a chance encounter at a bar with a former H.Y.D.R.A. operative named Rudi Gargarin. The two lament about the good old days when men could actually get their hands dirty. Gargarin proposes they quietly invade a seemingly non political island and run it into an all out war for their own benefit to get that feeling back again. Fury contemplates the idea but ultimately rejects it.

Fury on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “RAGE”:

Rage (also known as frenzy or fury) is intense, uncontrolled anger that is an increased stage of hostile response to a perceived egregious injury or injustice.

Rage is from c. 1300, meaning “madness, insanity; fit of frenzy; rashness, foolhardiness, intense or violent emotion, anger, wrath; fierceness in battle; violence” (of storms, fire, etc.); from the Old French rage or raige, meaning “spirit, passion, rage, fury, madness”; from 11th century Medieval Latin rabia; from the Latin rabies, meaning “madness, rage, fury,” which is related to the Latin rabere “be mad, rave.”

There are many cognates. The Latin rabies, meaning “anger, fury”, is akin to the Sanskrit “raag” (violence). The Vulgar Latin spelling of the word possesses many cognates when translated into many of the modern Romance languages, such as Spanish, Galician, Catalan, Portuguese, and modern Italian: rabia, rabia, ràbia, raiva, and rabbia respectively.

Rage can sometimes lead to a state of mind where the individuals experiencing it believe they can do, and often are capable of doing, things that may normally seem physically impossible. Those experiencing rage usually feel the effects of high adrenaline levels in the body. This increase in adrenal output raises the physical strength and endurance levels of the person and sharpens their senses, while dulling the sensation of pain. High levels of adrenaline impair memory. Temporal perspective is also affected: people in a rage have described experiencing events in slow-motion. Time dilation occurs due to the individual becoming hyper aware of the hind brain (the seat of fight or flight).[citation needed] Rational thought and reasoning would inhibit an individual from acting rapidly upon impulse. An older explanation of this “time dilation” effect is that instead of actually slowing our perception of time, high levels of adrenaline increase our ability to recall specific minutiae of an event after it occurs. Since humans gauge time based on the number of things they can remember, high-adrenaline events such as those experienced during periods of rage seem to unfold more slowly.

RAGE on Wikipedia

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