PO'd

PO'd

Very disgruntled, irritated, angry, or outraged. (A euphemistic abbreviation of "pissed off.") John was so PO'd when he found out that someone else had been given the promotion instead of him. There's no point in getting PO'd over a bad grade on your exam. Just study harder next time!
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

POed

mod. pissed off. The teacher was POed at the whole class.
See also: POe
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See also:
  • be PO'd
  • Po
  • POe
  • POed
  • get PO'd
  • rile up
  • have a cadenza
  • have a cob on
  • that (really) burns me up
  • that burns me
References in periodicals archive
The catsters were, in no particular order, indignant, offended, PO'd, and beyond believing that anyone could have possibly outfished them or their secret bait.
Their new offering, "PO'd with Dennis Miller and Adam Carolla," will be one hour, once a week and is part of the PodcastOne stable of programs.
Dion found herself immersed in a not-so-fairy-tail version of "The Princess and the Pee" - and she's PO'd. "I feel that my family was completely misled," Ms.
FEBRUARY Washington Post finds roaches, mouse poop, neglect, and PO'd wounded vets at Walter Reed.
Already in a permanent bad mood, Jarrod's really PO'd about the news that his bro has arranged to have his faithful dog put down.
Now it's very difficult to keep Amnesty International happy so that's business pretty much as usual, but when the "Friends" are PO'd that's something.
I knew how PO'd my fiance would be if I showed up for wedding pictures with each arm in a big white cast.
(b) Is this a statistical aberration basically reflecting the fact that the huddled masses of PO'd customers are more likely to sting the vendor every chance they get, even if they had "NO" from question (a) tattooed across their forehead?
I've gotten no response to my concerns, and I'm "PO'd" at them on this subject.