Outraged Sentence Examples

outraged
  • She appears more outraged than frightened which is annoying.

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  • This tyrant had made himself justly odious; and when he was hunted to death in 1259, the triumph was less for the Guelph cause than for humanity outraged by the iniquities of such a monster.

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  • They may be denied assertion or even outraged for a purpose, but they cannot be got rid of, - which is a moral advantage.

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  • Having been outraged by Sextus Tarquinius, one of the sons of Tarquinius Superbus, she informed her father and her husband, and, having exacted an oath of vengeance from them, stabbed herself to death.

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  • The wholesale seizure and degradation of Church property outraged them, and they formally protested against the introduction of " Luthery."

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  • His second wife, the "wanton Shrewsbury" of Pope, a daughter of the earl of Cardigan, was seduced by the duke of Buckingham, whom the outraged husband challenged to a duel.

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  • On the death of Cosimo in 1574 Francesco succeeded to the grand duchy; he now installed Bianca in a fine palace close to his own and outraged his wife by flaunting his mistress before her.

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  • The directcrs of Paris, not content with overrunning and plundering Switzerland, had outraged German sentiment in many ways.

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  • At last the law-abiding Jews might and must assert the majesty of the outraged Law.

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  • So long as the Law was not deliberately outraged and so long as the worship was established, most of the religious leaders of the Jews were content to wait.

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  • When the bitter truth was at length realized, the British flag was dragged through the dust of Pretoria streets by outraged Englishmen.

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  • The result was that, in the cases of Naxos and Thasos, for instance, the league's resources were employed not against the Persians but against recalcitrant Greek islands, and that the Greek ideal of separate autonomy was outraged.

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  • Thwarted at every point by the officials, and outraged by his countrymen in his attempt to carry out the new laws which his humanity had procured, he returned to Spain and resigned his dignity (1547).

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  • Christ suffering on behalf of sinners satisfies the divine righteousness, which was outraged by their sin.'3 His work is an expression of God's love to man; 14 the redeeming power of Christ's death is also explained by his solidarity with humanity as the second Adam," - the redeemed sinner has " died with Christ."

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  • The prefect Sempronius wished her to marry his son, and on her refusal condemned her to be outraged before her execution, but her honour was miraculously preserved.

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  • But in 1549 Pier Luigi was assassinated by his outraged subjects, and the emperor thereupon claimed the two duchies for his son-in-law Ottavio Farnese, Paul's grandson.

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  • This was far less than the prince meant to obtain, but he would probably have been forced to accept the offer for want of a better if the insolence of one of Yusef's messengers, a Spanish renegade, had not outraged a chief partisan of the Omayyad cause.

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  • On the evening of Sunday, the 9th of February, Mary took her last leave of the miserable boy who had so often and so mortally outraged her as consort and as queen.

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  • The moral sense was outraged by such a pope as Alexander VI.; and neither the military ambition of Julius II.

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  • The position was still further embittered by the fact that, owing to an indiscretion, the memorandum became known to the public. Thereupon the king, irritated and outraged, replaced Abel's Clerical ministry by a more accommodating Liberal one under Zu Rhein under which Lola Montez without more difficulty became Countess Landsberg.

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  • But neither Sheridan nor Fox was capable of that sustained and overflowing indignation at outraged justice and oppressed humanity, that consuming moral fire, which burst forth again and again from the chief manager of the impeachment, with such scorching might as drove even the cool and intrepid Hastings beyond all self-control, and made him cry out with protests and exclamations like a criminal writhing under the scourge.

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  • Moreover, the absence of sensible parallaxes in the stellar heavens seemed inconsistent with its validity; and a mobile earth outraged deep-rooted prepossessions.

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  • Outraged attacks on the Prince of Wales filled today's airwaves and press.

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  • Maggie Jewett, the school's assistant dean, told The Associated Press staff members were outraged at the costume.

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  • The outraged Scottish lords rose in revolt in the name of the now fatherless Prince James.

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  • She was, fortunately, able to get her pill elsewhere, but Kerrie was understandably outraged.

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  • Blair's defense, in response to a question from a rightly outraged Liberal Democrat MP, was to praise " diversity " .

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  • The Hungarians, always troublesome partners in the monarchy were equally outraged by Italy's conduct.

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  • They were outraged at tightened game laws and the loss of the social safety net of common pasture and woodland.

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  • Public opinion had been outraged by the immunity with which the governors of certain provinces, and more particularly Dr Julio Costa, the governor of the province of Buenos Aires, had been allowed to maintain local forces, by the aid of which they exacted the payment of illegal taxes and exercised other acts of injustice and oppression.

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  • Villages were sacked, and burnt, men,, women and anc ldren mutilated, tortured or roasted alive, and women outraged.

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  • The French have destroyed my home and are on their way to destroy Moscow, they have outraged and are outraging me every moment.

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  • She looked so sweetly pretty that I repented having outraged her so scandalously.

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  • Amazon started with the narrow market of book buyers, and many observers were outraged at its high stock price when it went public; it was only a bookseller, after all.

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  • Why are so many outraged over Dog's arrest?

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  • Readers were outraged by TV Guide's hoax, but none more than Ann-Margret's fashion designer who recognized the sparkly dress and reported the fakery.

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  • If the lion senses an injustice, he'll feel outraged and won't rest until justice has been re-established.

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  • Fans are often outraged when a favorite show or performer is overlooked during the awards ceremony.

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  • This means that a winner may have only had a featured role for a short time but still win, leaving some fans and other performers a bit outraged at times.

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  • Fans were outraged and intrigued at the same time as Josh Lewis' love for Reva drove him to create a clone of her after her 'death.'

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  • Fans were outraged when scribes altered her 1970's abortion by retroactively saying the embryo was stolen and implanted in another woman, but Susan's portrayal remained as graceful as ever.

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  • Outraged fans can still point out that despite the indignity of trying to rewrite one of the soap's greatest historical moments, Erica Kane still planned to have an abortion and her intent remained firm.

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  • Emma, herself the product of a teen pregnancy, is outraged.

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  • The fact that the Resurrection is not included in the story has outraged religious groups.

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  • Whether you love the song, are outraged by the song or just can't stand to hear it one more time, it has firmly put Katy Perry on the map as music's next big thing.

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  • Elvis began to play shows in the regional concert circuit and developed a reputation for his leg shaking dance, which outraged some parents while earning him legions of adoring female fans.

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  • Even the churches offered little opposition to the excesses of persons in authority, and in many instances the clergy, both Protestant and Catholic, acquired an unenviable notoriety for their readiness to overlook or condone actions which outraged the higher sentiments of humanity.

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  • Then to coerce the Jews into con formity, the Law was outraged in the Holy Place.

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  • Instead, his wife was scourged (doubtless for resisting the annexation), his daughters outraged, his chief tribesmen plundered.

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  • His system of persecution was not abandoned till in the last year of his reign (1020) he thought fit to claim divinity, a doctrine which is perpetuated by the Druses, called after one DarazI, who preached the divinity of Ijakim at the time; the violent opposition which this aroused among the Moslems probably led him to adopt milder measures towards his other subjects, and those who had been forcibly converted were permitted to return to their former religion and rebuild their places of worship. Whether his disappearance at the beginning of the year 1021 was due to the resentment of his outraged subjects, or, as the historians say, to his sisters fear that he would bequeath the caliphate to a distant relative to the exclusion of his own son, will never be known.

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