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ire (n.)

c. 1300, from Old French ire "anger, wrath, violence" (11c.), from Latin ira "anger, wrath, rage, passion," from PIE root *eis- (1), forming various words denoting passion (source also of Greek hieros "filled with the divine, holy," oistros "gadfly," originally "thing causing madness;" Sanskrit esati "drives on," yasati "boils;" Avestan aesma "anger;" Lithuanian aistra "violent passion").

Old English irre in a similar sense is unrelated; it is from an adjective irre "wandering, straying, angry," which is cognate with Old Saxon irri "angry," Old High German irri "wandering, deranged," also "angry;" Gothic airzeis "astray," and Latin errare "wander, go astray, angry" (see err (v.)).

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Definitions of ire from WordNet

ire (n.)
a strong emotion; a feeling that is oriented toward some real or supposed grievance;
Synonyms: anger / choler
ire (n.)
belligerence aroused by a real or supposed wrong (personified as one of the deadly sins);
Synonyms: wrath / anger / ira
From wordnet.princeton.edu