VIOLATE vs OUTRAGE: NOUN
- N/A
- A feeling of righteous anger
- A disgraceful event
- A wantonly cruel act
- An act of extreme violence or viciousness.
- Something that is grossly offensive to decency, morality, or good taste.
- Resentful anger aroused by a violent or offensive act, or an instance of this.
- A destructive rampage.
- The act of scandalizing
- An offensive, immoral or indecent act.
- An excessively violent or vicious attack; an atrocity.
- Excess; luxury.
- Injurious violence or wanton wrong done to persons or things; a gross violation of right or decency; excessive abuse; wanton mischief; gross injury.
- Synonyms Insult, Indignity, etc. See affront.
- 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.
- A passing beyond bounds; a thing or act not within established or reasonable limits; in general, excess; extravagance; luxury.
- Violence; a violent act; violent injury.
- The resentful anger aroused by such acts.
VIOLATE vs OUTRAGE: VERB
- Destroy and strip of its possession
- Violate the sacred character of a place or language
- Act in disregard of laws and rules
- Force (someone) to have sex against their will
- Destroy
- To break, disregard, disagree or not act according to (rules, conventions, etc.).
- To rape.
- Act in disregard of laws, rules, contracts, or promises
- Fail to agree with; be in violation of; as of rules or patterns
- Violate the sacred character of a place or language
- Force (someone) to have sex against their will
- To cause or commit an outrage.
- To cause resentment through such acts.
- Strike with disgust or revulsion
VIOLATE vs OUTRAGE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To be guilty of an outrage; to act outrageously.
VIOLATE vs OUTRAGE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To assault (a person) sexually.
- To do harm to (property or qualities considered sacred); desecrate or defile.
- To commit rape on; to ravish; to outrage.
- To disturb; to interrupt.
- To disregard or act in a manner that does not conform to (a law or promise, for example).
- To treat in a violent manner; to abuse.
- To do violence to, as to anything that should be held sacred or respected; to profane; to desecrate; to break forcibly; to trench upon; to infringe.
- To disturb rudely or improperly; interrupt.
- To produce anger or resentment in: : offend.
- To commit outrage upon; to subject to outrage; to treat with violence or excessive abuse.
- Specifically, to violate; to commit an indecent assault upon (a female).
- To cause to become very angry.
- To rage in excess of.
- To offend grossly against (standards of decency or morality); commit an outrage on.
VIOLATE vs OUTRAGE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Fail to agree with
- Be in violation of
- As of rules or patterns
- To desecrate; dishonor; treat with irreverence; profane, or meddle with profanely.
- To break in upon; interrupt; disturb.
- To infringe; transgress, as a contract, law, promise, or the like, either by a positive act contrary to the promise, etc., or by neglect or non-fulfilment: as, to violate confidence.
- To ravish; deflower by force; commit rape on.
- To treat roughly or injuriously; handle so as to harm or hurt; do violence to; outrage.
- Unreasonable; violent; mad.
- Extraordinary; unexampled; unusual; surprising; extravagant.
- To exceed in raging; rage beyond or more than.
- To attack; do violence, especially extreme wrong or violence, to; wrong heinously; maltreat.
- 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.
- Synonyms See affront, n.
- To be excessive; commit excesses or extravagances; wanton; run riot; act without self-restraint or outrageously.
- To assault violently or brutally; commit a barbarous attack upon; especially, to violate; ravish.
VIOLATE vs OUTRAGE: RELATED WORDS
- Infract, Go against, Plunder, Rape, Dishonour, Ravish, Outrage, Break, Despoil, Dishonor, Profane, Desecrate, Offend, Transgress, Breach
- Profane, Exasperate, Rape, Dishonour, Violate, Desecrate, Scandalize, Offend, Dishonor, Infuriate, Appal, Shock, Appall, Scandal, Indignation
VIOLATE vs OUTRAGE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Infringe, Violation, Contravene, Go against, Dishonour, Ravish, Outrage, Break, Despoil, Dishonor, Profane, Desecrate, Offend, Transgress, Breach
- Uproar, Ravish, Incense, Profane, Exasperate, Dishonour, Violate, Desecrate, Offend, Dishonor, Infuriate, Appal, Shock, Scandal, Indignation
VIOLATE vs OUTRAGE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- These provisions violate the Act in two ways.
- That governments violate human rights is hardly surprising.
- The landlord can terminate your rental agreement if you violate the terms of the agreement or if you violate the law.
- Federal crimes are defined as acts that violate federal laws, as opposed to crimes that violate state or local laws.
- DUI offenders who violate their restricted license are subject to similar penalties that are applied to offenders who violate the terms of their probation.
- The strip searches conducted upon admission do not violate Fourth Amendment standards, but the searches after contact visits violate the Fourth Amendment.
- In short, the prior examples of wrongdoing must violate the same constitutional rights and violate them in the same way.
- Other types of entropies that violate the Shore and Johnson axioms, including nonadditive entropies such as the Tsallis entropy, violate this basic consistency requirement.
- Viewing, transmitting, downloading, or seeking obscene or pornographicmaterials or materials that violate or encourage others to violate the law.
- While such disparities will not violate constitutional guarantees, they may violate core policy imperatives to avoid racially unjust outcomes.
- 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.
VIOLATE vs OUTRAGE: QUESTIONS
- Why do people violate conversational implicature maxims?
- Does reasonable suspicion violate the 4th Amendment?
- Does alixarx violate the Controlled Substances Act?
- Does political correctness violate the First Amendment?
- Do extraterritorial animal laws violate international law?
- Does teaching evolution violate the First Amendment?
- Does marital status discrimination violate Title VII?
- Does representativeness heuristic violate Bayes'theorem?
- Did SmileDirectClub violate consumer protection laws?
- Does quantum tunneling violate energy conservation?
- 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?