OUTRAGE vs SCANDAL: NOUN
- Synonyms Insult, Indignity, etc. See affront.
- Injurious violence or wanton wrong done to persons or things; a gross violation of right or decency; excessive abuse; wanton mischief; gross injury.
- Excess; luxury.
- A wantonly cruel act
- An offensive, immoral or indecent act.
- A destructive rampage.
- Gross insult or injury: infamous wrong; audacious and especially violent infraction of law and order; atrocious or barbarous ill treatment; wanton, indecent, or immoral violence, or an act of wanton mischief or violence, especially against the person.
- Violence; a violent act; violent injury.
- A passing beyond bounds; a thing or act not within established or reasonable limits; in general, excess; extravagance; luxury.
- Resentful anger aroused by a violent or offensive act, or an instance of this.
- Something that is grossly offensive to decency, morality, or good taste.
- An act of extreme violence or viciousness.
- The act of scandalizing
- A feeling of righteous anger
- A disgraceful event
- The resentful anger aroused by such acts.
- An excessively violent or vicious attack; an atrocity.
- Defamatory talk; gossip, slander.
- Something which hinders acceptance of religious ideas or behaviour; a stumbling-block or offense.
- Religious discredit; an act or behaviour which brings a religion into discredit.
- Widespread moral outrage, indignation, as over an offence to decency.
- Damage to one's reputation.
- An incident or event that disgraces or damages the reputation of the persons or organization involved.
- Anything alleged in pleading which is impertinent, and is reproachful to any person, or which derogates from the dignity of the court, or is contrary to good manners.
- Reproachful aspersion; opprobrious censure; defamatory talk, uttered heedlessly or maliciously.
- Offense caused or experienced; reproach or reprobation called forth by what is regarded as wrong, criminal, heinous, or flagrant: opprobrium or disgrace.
- Backbiting, slander, calumny, detraction.
- That which causes scandal or gives offense; an action or circumstance that brings public disgrace to the persons involved, or offends public morals.
- An irrelevant and defamatory or indecent statement introduced into a pleading or proceeding; any allegation or statement which is unbecoming the dignity of the court to hear, or is contrary to good manners, or which unnecessarily either charges a person with a crime or bears cruelly on his moral character.
- In law: A report, rumor, or action whereby one is affronted in public.
- Reproachful aspersion; defamatory speech or report; something uttered which is injurious to reputation; defamatory talk; malicious gossip.
- Offense caused by faults or misdeeds; reproach or reprobation called forth by what is considered wrong; opprobrium; shame; disgrace.
- Talk that is damaging to one's character; malicious gossip.
- Damage to reputation or character caused by public disclosure of immoral or grossly improper behavior; disgrace.
- Disgraceful gossip about the private lives of other people
- A disgraceful event
- A publicized incident that brings about disgrace or offends the moral sensibilities of society.
- A person, thing, or circumstance that causes or ought to cause disgrace or outrage.
- Synonyms Discredit, disrepute, dishonor.
OUTRAGE vs SCANDAL: VERB
- Strike with disgust or revulsion
- Force (someone) to have sex against their will
- Violate the sacred character of a place or language
- To cause resentment through such acts.
- To cause or commit an outrage.
- N/A
OUTRAGE vs SCANDAL: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To be guilty of an outrage; to act outrageously.
- N/A
OUTRAGE vs SCANDAL: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To rage in excess of.
- To offend grossly against (standards of decency or morality); commit an outrage on.
- To cause to become very angry.
- Specifically, to violate; to commit an indecent assault upon (a female).
- To commit outrage upon; to subject to outrage; to treat with violence or excessive abuse.
- To produce anger or resentment in: : offend.
- To scandalize; to offend.
- To treat opprobriously; to defame; to asperse; to traduce; to slander.
OUTRAGE vs SCANDAL: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To be excessive; commit excesses or extravagances; wanton; run riot; act without self-restraint or outrageously.
- Synonyms See affront, n.
- To transgress shamefully; infringe audaciously upon; break through, violate, or offend against atrociously or flagrantly; act in utter or shameless disregard of the authority, obligation, or claims of.
- To assault violently or brutally; commit a barbarous attack upon; especially, to violate; ravish.
- To attack; do violence, especially extreme wrong or violence, to; wrong heinously; maltreat.
- Extraordinary; unexampled; unusual; surprising; extravagant.
- Unreasonable; violent; mad.
- To exceed in raging; rage beyond or more than.
- To scandalize; offend; shock.
- To throw scandal on; defame; asperse; traduce.
OUTRAGE vs SCANDAL: RELATED WORDS
- Profane, Exasperate, Rape, Dishonour, Violate, Desecrate, Scandalize, Offend, Dishonor, Infuriate, Appal, Shock, Appall, Scandal, Indignation
- Bombshell, Disgrace, Outcry, Embarrassment, Turmoil, Scam, Affair, Corruption, Scandalous, Uproar, Furore, Controversy, Malicious gossip, Dirt, Outrage
OUTRAGE vs SCANDAL: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Uproar, Ravish, Incense, Profane, Exasperate, Dishonour, Violate, Desecrate, Offend, Dishonor, Infuriate, Appal, Shock, Scandal, Indignation
- Incident, Shameful, Bombshell, Disgrace, Embarrassment, Turmoil, Scam, Affair, Corruption, Scandalous, Uproar, Controversy, Malicious gossip, Dirt, Outrage
OUTRAGE vs SCANDAL: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Never lose your sense of outrage over this.
- That helpless feeling is soon followed by outrage.
- Widespread confusion was followed by outrage and controversy.
- Only to be met with faux political outrage.
- The murder of George Floyd was an outrage.
- I hope the exclamation points express my outrage.
- We have rendered to these true cannibals, war for war, crime for crime, outrage for outrage.
- HAMMONDS: So you have these episodes that are often referred to and people, you know, react in horror, horror, outrage, outrage.
- Outrage, but not the national and international outrage.
- There I, in turn, humiliated him, outrage for outrage.
- Air Mail scandal files that had been subpoenaed.
- So that was a scandal to begin with.
- Will Corruption Scandal Sink Netanyahu Weeks Before Election?
- Went through eight years without one single trace of scandal, not one single trace of scandal.
- Houston Astros cheating scandal, how that cheating scandal relates to the Trump impeachment saga, and Catalyst and the art of Mac software design.
- EADS scandal, the Hermitage Capital tax frauds and the scandal involving the London branch of the Wachovia financial services company.
- Massillon Tigers betting scandal was the first major scandal in professional football in the United States.
- Scandal Many people may be thinking the scandal award for intolerance should go to Donald Sterling, and it was a close call.
- The private university has been mired in scandal after scandal in recent years.
- Pharisaic scandal and the scandal of little ones.
OUTRAGE vs SCANDAL: QUESTIONS
- Is being neutral in a situation of moral outrage cowardice?
- What is the best moveset for dragon tail and outrage?
- Why did the invasion of Panama provoke international outrage?
- Is the Russian invasion of Ukraine a moral outrage?
- Was Tipu Sultan responsible for Mappila outrage of 1921?
- Should we use social media to express moral outrage?
- Do moral outrage and dehumanization correlate with retributive justice?
- When does Dragonite learn outrage in Pokemon fire red?
- Will Resident Evil outrage be on the Nintendo Switch?
- How does Chandra's outrage interact with claustrophobia?
- What was the Southern Methodist University football scandal?
- What happened to Citibank after the Revlon scandal?
- What happened with the Krispy Kreme accounting scandal?
- What was the Harding Administration scandal Quizlet?
- Is anatomy of a scandal'unintentionally hilarious'?
- Is PricewaterhouseCoopers liable for Colonial Bank scandal?
- Does the Conservative campaign promote scandal-mongering?
- Are butchers benefiting from the Horsemeat scandal?
- Is the Enron scandal similar to the Satyam scandal?
- Could the Clinton Foundation scandal reignite foreign corruption scandal?