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noun

outrage

OWT-rayj
noun
1
Strong anger or indignation caused by something shocking or unfair.
"The verdict sparked outrage across the country."
"There was widespread outrage at the company's decision to cut jobs."
2
A shockingly violent, cruel, or offensive act.
"The bombing was condemned as an outrage against innocent civilians."
verb
1
To make someone feel angry and shocked.
"The comments outraged animal rights groups."

How to Use Outrage

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishIntense anger at something shocking or unjust — or the shocking act itself.

Common mistake

Despite how it sounds, "outrage" has nothing etymologically to do with "rage" — that link is a coincidence of later pronunciation.

Common pairings
public outrage spark outrage moral outrage

Word Forms

outraged past tense, outrages plural, outrages singular

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The verdict sparked _____ across the country.

Etymology

From Old French outrage, "excess," ultimately from Latin ultra ("beyond"). It was later reinterpreted by English speakers as out- + rage, which is why it's pronounced that way today — even though the two words aren't actually related.

Rhymes for outrage

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Definitions: FreeDict original editorial