From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishseetheseethe /siːð/ verb [intransitive] 1 to feel an emotion, especially anger, so strongly that you are almost shaking SYN fumeseethe with He was seething with anger. I was absolutely seething.2 → be seething (with something)→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
seethe• He went to bed seething.• By late May the 9: 15 community was seething.• The wood crackled and seethed and the flames united into a single fire.• Unprepared for the constant clamor, stress and hostility of prison life, he develops a seething anger and torturing headaches.• Stephen, seething inwardly, was left with nothing to say.• It was not seething with guests.• It seethes with passionate opinion in a way that rarely marks debates in Washington.• The harbor of the naval base seethed with tremendous activity.seethe with• The harbor of the naval base seethed with activity.• Daniel was seething with jealousy.Origin seethe Old English seothan “to boil”