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Discover LudwigThe phrase "aroused outrage" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a situation or action that has provoked strong feelings of anger or indignation among people.
Example: "The controversial decision by the government aroused outrage among citizens, leading to widespread protests."
Alternatives: "sparked outrage" or "provoked outrage."
Exact(3)
The terror they caused aroused outrage across the world; the Bush administration called the killings genocide.
It has aroused outrage around the world, alarming friends and allies, depriving the United States of its reputation as a country that does not resort to inhumanity.
"I remember the time we were talking about how to tackle obesity, and he said, 'Limit the size of sugary drinks, no one will notice.' " (Mr. Bloomberg's restrictions on large sodas, set to take effect next month, have aroused outrage in some quarters and are being challenged in court by the soft-drink industry).
Similar(57)
The spectacle of a handcuffed IMF head doing the "perp walk" aroused special outrage.
On Tuesday, two of the boy's relatives pleaded guilty to charges stemming from the death of the child, Faheem Williams, in a case that aroused national outrage and laid bare the failures of the state's child welfare system.
Isutani had aroused public outrage with plans to sell private memberships to wealthy Japanese for about $740,000 each--a scheme aimed at leveraging his way out of the crushing debt incurred in his purchase of the fabled coastal property.
But after the photo was reproduced so often, it could not help but lose its initial capacity to arouse outrage.
Not by arousing moral outrage at a very expensive something-for-nothing for all.
Cases like Ms. Gehris's have been getting attention around the country in the last few years, and arousing public outrage.
One can't help wonder why leaders like Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Kim Jong-il are allowed to repeatedly threaten their neighbors without arousing any outrage in Europe.
The toughened car ban aroused more student outrage against administrative "paternalism". In a stunt, another member of the Lambert clan from St . Louis George Lambert 1927, mocked the rule by buzzing campus in his shiny yellow airplane during Commencement.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com