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Outrage in a sentence

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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. 
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(211) According to the Daily Mail of November 22, Newsweek magazine depicted President Obama as the Hindu deity Lord Shiva on its recent cover of the same day, which arouses Indian-American group's outrage.
(212) Outrage mounted as Goldman steadily accrued a huge bonus pool.
(213) Will there be blowback, outrage and constant discussion of the impact of censorship on Facebook in China?
(214) Setting the murderous criminal free is an outrage against justice.
(215) Express your outrage in social action, letters, donations, marches, protests.
(216) A century ago, President Theodore Roosevelt's invitation of Booker T. Washington to dine at the White House was taken as an outrage in many quarters.
(217) The tone of their protests had been Annies exactly - not bereavement but outrage.
(218) Most remaining Northern Whigs , like Lincoln, joined the new Republican Party and strongly attacked the Act,[http://sentencedict.com/outrage.html] appealing to widespread northern outrage over the repeal of the Missouri Compromise.
(219) Sunday’s beatification ceremony took place despite criticism about the record speed with which John Paul was being honored, and continued outrage about clerical abuse.
(220) But he could also find his administration blown off-course or even swept aside by popular outrage.
(221) The remorseless demolition of wretched homes and lives by a mighty high-tech war machine cannot but cause grief and outrage in any decent onlooker.
(222) She could see only outrage and humiliation, leering at her, mocking her.
(223) You incite them to outrage for bad purposes of your own.
(224) But they still live significantly longer than their menfolk, a fact that would cause a lot more media outrage if the high-heeled boot were on the other foot.
(225) Its execution involved an outrage upon the law of nations.
(226) As the economy rebounds and public outrage subsides, the clam our for change will quieten.
(227) "The day after the elections, CNN started a 24-hour psychological war room against Iran, " Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hassan Qashqavi told a moderator with seeming outrage on Iranian state TV.
(228) Such a lie is an outrage to anyone who loves the truth.
(229) The popular outrage generated by Upton Sinclair's devastating, fact-based novel about the meatpacking industry in Chicago, The Jungle, had helped to create the Food and Drug Administration in 1906.
(230) "How do they justify this outrage to the taxpayers who are keeping the company afloat, " the president said, adding that the insurer is in financial straits because of "recklessness and greed.
More similar words: neutralragefor agesenragegaragecourageaveragestoragetragicsuffragecoverageencouragecourageousbrokerageon averagediscouragediscouragedcourageouslyencouragementdiscouragementoutreachnutrientragdragdrag inraggedviragodrag ondragoonfragile
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