1. outrage
People felt outraged by the way they were treated.
When hazard is low and outrage high, people overreact.
These murders have provoked outrage across the country.
... they were full of outrage, they were full of...
The bomb, which killed 15 people, was the worst of a series of terrorist outrages.
shaking with outrage
The court's decision resulted in moral outrage
There was outrage in the media when the goverment announced plans to reduce the prison sentences for murders.
he said he was outraged that British censors demanded they trim bad language
Many outraged viewers wrote to the BBC to complain.
The public has been outraged by the recent scandals of this government
outrage = to anger or offend; shock
When art nouveau was showcased first in Paris and then in London, there was outrage; people either loved it or loathed it.
outrage is a feeling of very strong anger
This is an outrage!