From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishoutburstout‧burst /ˈaʊtbɜːst $ -bɜːrst/●くろまる○しろまる○しろまる noun [countable]1ANGRYsomething you say suddenly that expresses a strong emotion, especially angerHe later apologized for his outburst.emotional/violent/angry outbursthis father’s violent outbursts of temperoutburst ofan outburst of anger2INCREASE IN ACTIVITY, FEELINGS ETCa sudden short increase in an activityoutburst ofan outburst of creative energyoutbursts of violenceExamples from the Corpusoutburst• a freshoutburst of violence in the region• And yet he said nothing to provoke her outburst.• Corbin apologized for his outburst at the meeting.• Frequent church hopping, intermittentattendance and inappropriateoutbursts of anger by the husband can also be signals.• His moments of inspiration did much to elevate the Stuttgart event, a relaxedaffair apart from the oddobligatoryoutburst.• I was embarrassed by my husband's outburst.• And it becomes necessary to self-motivate yourself during a game instead of relying on a spontaneousoutburst of noise from the fans.• He had sudden outbursts of furious anger which were always fatal to the often innocent objects.• He moves slowly back, unsure of the reason behind my sudden outburst.• I couldn't possibly know, but that outburst, understandable as it was, greatly disturbed me.• When the outburst comes it is very effective.The lyricism of Tennyson's poetry is magnificent.outburst of• outbursts of anger