native

How do I say ‘I’m angry’?

A direct and natural statement that your emotional state has changed to anger.

我生气了

wǒ shēngqì le

I’m angry / I’m upset now.

LITERAL

I have become angry.

WHAT IT REALLY MEANS

I’m angry / I’m upset now.

WHEN IT FITS

Stating anger directlyRelationship conflictExplaining a visible change in mood

Using 了 highlights that something has made you angry now, rather than describing your general temperament.

了 marks the arrival of anger — a specific trigger made you angry, as opposed to describing your general temperament. For everyday irritation rather than full anger, 不高兴 (literally “not happy”) is the standard softer choice, while 愤怒 belongs in formal writing or describes sustained outrage.

HOW PEOPLE ACTUALLY SAY IT

你这样说,我真的生气了。

Nǐ zhèyàng shuō, wǒ zhēn de shēngqì le.

When you say that, I’m genuinely angry.

Direct conflict
别生气,我不是故意的。

Bié shēngqì, wǒ bú shì gùyì de.

Don’t be angry. I didn’t do it on purpose.

Trying to calm someone

CHOOSE BY SITUATION

我有点不高兴

wǒ yǒudiǎn bù gāoxìng

I’m a little unhappy about it.

You want a softer, less confrontational expression