Sentencedict.com
 Directly to word page Vague search(google)
Home > Outrage in a sentence

Outrage in a sentence

  up(3)  down(2)
Sentence count:230+9Posted:2016-12-21Updated:2020-07-24
Synonym: appalappallassaultdesecratedishonordishonourindignationoffendprofaneraperavishscandalscandalisationscandalisescandalizationscandalizeshockviolateSimilar words: neutralragefor agesenragegaragecourageaveragestorageMeaning: ['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. 
Random good picture Not show
(181) For the Hazaras, who have strong emotional ties to their history, the outrage was perceived as yet another irreparable wound.
(182) Several parents of affected children have written to the Prime Minister to express their outrage.
(183) She was spared further abuse - possibly torture - only after international outrage put pressure on the regime for her release.
(184) Mrs. Rumbold I well understand my hon. Friend's outrage at the behaviour of some youngsters today.
(185) This is an unheard - of outrage.
(186) Her brow wrinkled with outrage.
(187) How much outrage can a single multinational corporation inspire?
(188) Tom, this is an outrage!
(189) The Treaty has failed to arouse genuine public outrage.
(190) Kennedy handled the firestorm of outrage with self-defeating smugness.
(190) Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and create good sentences.
(191) In the former half century, all giants talked about meaninglessness , outrage, suffering, worry, terror, fear and anxiety.
(192) Expecting outrage and imposition, she was relieved to find she felt nothing.
(193) Within days Merrill switched from outrage to surrender: At its annual meeting in late April, CEO David Komansky abjectly apologized to his clients.
(194) The Met’s trustees were afraid it would provoke public outrage and Bryson Burroughs, its director, thought Picasso a madman.
(195) Would the use of H - bombs be an outrage against humanity?
(196) He spewed sentences whose dependent clauses piled up into midden heaps of outrage or joy.
(197) The terrible suffering we see may certainly disturb and outrage us, but the outrage turns to compassion and creativity rather than to anger, despair(sentencedict.com), or vindictiveness.
(198) So, what is so different about Pride and Prejudice and Zombies that it shouldn’t elicit the kind of outrage Axolotl Roadkill does?
(199) This is a first in Canadian journalistic history and an outrage of the highest order.
(200) Nobody is being harmed by respecting another country's laws in this regard, so your outrage is purely self-involved narcissistic rage.
(201) Arriving in Britain in the 1960s, he invented the modern tabloid newspaper—a stew of sexual titillation, moral outrage and political aggression.
(202) If you need a moment of instant populist outrage, imagine all those children of people who made billions in the casino of credit default swaps passing on the gains to their little darlings, tax-free.
(203) State institutions that invested in sinking foreign banks have faced public outrage for squandering national resources.
(204) Others finger Salman Rushdie's knighthood as an incitement of Muslim outrage.
(205) In the front half century, all giants talked about meaninglessness, outrage, suffer, worry, terror, fear and anxiety.
(206) Xinhua says Lan's death is provoking outrage on Internet sites in China.
(207) The reduced sentence provoked tears and expressions of outrage from relatives of the victims of Kaing Guek Eav, better known as "Duch."
(208) His fervor echoed the outrage of Bishop Irenaeus—a reminder that here, in the shadow of the stark Red Sea Mountains, the early Christian world is close at hand.
(209) Risk communications consultant Dr. Peter Sandman, believes an apology can go a long way in healing wounds and reducing outrage. To apologize effectively, he recommends you follow these steps.
(210) His recollection of having a flag torn off his army uniform mixes sadness, outrage and poetry in a manner that is quintessentially Wilsonian.
More similar words: neutralragefor agesenragegaragecourageaveragestoragetragicsuffragecoverageencouragecourageousbrokerageon averagediscouragediscouragedcourageouslyencouragementdiscouragementoutreachnutrientragdragdrag inraggedviragodrag ondragoonfragile
Total 230, 30 Per page  7/8  «first  pre  next  last»  goto
Leave a comment
Welcome to leave a comment about this page!
Your name:
Latest commentsInto the comment page>>
More words