Outraged in a sentence as an adjective

We should all be outraged by this because it clearly doesn't represent the interest of the people.

I think you should be even more outraged about the fact that Congress doesn't really seem to care that they lied to them.

I dont understand why you seem to think that something being legal is reason to not be outraged.

People in those categories usually don't even make it as far as an outraged Salon article.

Obviously, some people are outraged about this issue, just as some people were outraged when a gunman killed 30 children.

They appear outraged that US citizens are spied on, with the implication that it was ok when non us citizens were spied on.

To be honest, I miss having GWB as a president, because then the smart people were all outraged at the horrible stuff the president was doing.

They're outraged by the betrayal of the police, making an end-run around the law that they thoroughly defeated to prevent the police from having master keys.

People are outraged; their lockmakers are supposed to make locks that even the police can't get in through; people don't trust these secret warrants and secret searches, and with good reason, as the police have used these secret searches to investigate ex-lovers before, not just terrorists.

" You're not fooling anyone: the schtick you are employing is to make statements that are tailored to offend, under the guise of "stating your opinion," and then get outraged when they do offend and people take advantage of the moderation mechanism of a downvote to say, "we don't want this here.

If a college degree just means you banged out a bunch of garbage essays, as it does for many people based on the assignments I saw contracted out, should we really be outraged that some people are not doing the work themselves?I would argue that the real scandal is not that some people are paying for help, but that many degree programs demand so little in terms of knowledge and thought that they can be easily gamed in this way.

Outraged definitions

adjective

angered at something unjust or wrong; "an indignant denial"; "incensed at the judges' unfairness"; "a look of outraged disbelief"; "umbrageous at the loss of their territory"

See also: indignant incensed umbrageous