Synonym: appal, appall, assault, desecrate, dishonor, dishonour, indignation, offend, profane, rape, ravish, scandal, scandalisation, scandalise, scandalization, scandalize, shock, violate. Similar words: neutral, rage, for ages, enrage, garage, courage, average, storage. Meaning: ['aʊtreɪdʒ] n. 1. a feeling of righteous anger 2. a wantonly cruel act 3. a disgraceful event 4. the act of scandalizing. v. 1. strike with disgust or revulsion 2. violate the sacred character of a place or language 3. force (someone) to have sex against their will.
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(151) It's an outrage that men who didn't finish high school sometimes earn more than women with college educations.
(152) This women's protest was received with expressions of outrage and puzzlement by men within the dominant political culture.
(153) In the afternoon, ritual becomes outrage and entire buckets of water are thrown at all and sundry.
(154) But he seemed to want to shake things up, to outrage me.
(155) The proposal, from Detroit's ombudsman, has caused outrage - and a certain amount of thought.
(156) The killing, which occurred in 1988, was met with worldwide outrage and focused attention on environmental destruction of the Amazon.
(157) Parades can be rerouted, but changing them is an outrage to those who cherish their own cultural traditions.
(158) The result, and the acceptance of it, is nothing less than an outrage.
(159) The letters and complaints accurately reflect the outrage by the taxpayers at this blatant partisan action.
(160) A socialist youth was on his feet, roaring with all the force and outrage of his years.sentencedict.com
(161) Young Oliver Rowntree, nursing his outrage, spent the summer brooding about what he could do to retaliate.
(162) When writing, you probably experience the same anxieties, ranging from irritation to frustration to outrage.
(163) Outrage at what they saw as the pillaging of their resources led many Latin countries to nationalise oil firms.
(164) Probably there wouldn't be words sufficient to express the outrage.
(165) Senator Jackson said this was blood money and an outrage.
(166) Cope's own sleevenotes have also caused outrage, containing vitriolic attacks on Axl Rose and U2, among others.
(167) If the federal government is to change the law, it will need to act quickly, while the outrage lasts.
(168) There is something in this above controversy and outrage and all these over-familiar words.
(169) Our history is too full of pain and outrage to want any of it back.
(170) That does not suggest the outrage that a perusal of Hansard might beguile readers into expecting.
(171) Some Wall Street firms have expressed outrage at punitive awards, and many investors have complained of brokers' stalling tactics.
(172) The cartoons caused outrage when they were leaked to the press last week.
(173) Any attempts to lessen his prison sentence will cause public outrage.
(174) I have felt the same shock and outrage since I lived in the Lakeside area and watched the butchery of those trees.
(175) That sort of episode makes them subject to public outrage.
(176) Whatever the topic under discussion, they automatically began with some resentful expression of moral outrage.
(177) Nelson watched him with no contempt, no outrage, no brotherly feeling.
(178) But last night a spokesman for the Portadown business community pledged that life would go on despite the outrage.
(179) I voiced particular outrage at superseding the Greene County District Attorney.
(180) The sense of anger and outrage within the community seemed to grow by the hour.
More similar words: neutral, rage, for ages, enrage, garage, courage, average, storage, tragic, suffrage, coverage, encourage, courageous, brokerage, on average, discourage, discouraged, courageously, encouragement, discouragement, outreach, nutrient, rag, drag, drag in, ragged, virago, drag on, dragoon, fragile.