A state of irritation or annoyance.
1That would miff almost any leader, having his underling co-opted like that.
2You deserve to be shot, Mañuel, for joining in a miff.
3He may take a miff at any of us any time.
4It is just miff-maff and nonsense letting him go any longer to the schoolmaster.
5She's taken a miff at something, I suppose, and means to cut my acquaintance.
6I've been all through the miff and I know.
7But at the moment she seemed uncharacteristically unwilling to talk-probablya continuing miff over impending braces.
8I suppose they did better, for I never saw them afterwards, and so had no opportunity of showing my miff if I had any.
9Miffed at the treatment, I dropped the phone and glared at it.
10He said they were perfect miffs to be nosed around like that.
11However, PG's response to the Stage 6 crisis has left South Africans miffed.
12Well, then... thank you, he said, miffed, sounding like I'd short changed him.
13She could hardly be miffed that he hadn't asked her along.
14Carl looked a bit miffed even after Theo had explained herself.
15She miffed and started to reply, but thought better of it.
16Falitz was always miffed by Terrace's lack of respect for women.