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The case provoked outrage well beyond Nigeria.
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Most, though by no means all, Republican killings were by mob violence, not deliberate policy, in the first six months of the war, as popular outrage welled up after air raids and news of fascist atrocities.
If the tabloids are outraged, well, maybe they shouldn't have been earwigging while the grown-ups were talking.
In "Wall Street," he created one of the most memorable modern cinematic villains, lending Gordon Gekko the good lines and the good looks; in "Snowden," Stone's own sense of outrage, as well as his identification with Snowden, ultimately get the best of him, literally, and turn Corbin ridiculous.
But Mr. Perry stands to benefit from the liberal outrage as well.
But the Iran-Contra scandal in the Reagan years evoked plenty of real outrage, as well as high dudgeon.
Okri left school at 14, and wrote journalism "out of a sense of outrage", as well as poetry and stories.
The twist at the end of the skit was an outburst by Obama himself, making clear that, when provoked, he can express outrage perfectly well on his own.
The long poem by Tony Harrison, "V", from which this verse is quoted, caused outrage as well as enthusiasm when it was televised in 1989.
He is only in his early 60s, and he has a new picture, The Outrage, as well as an older one, Takeshis' (2005), getting a UK release.
But a broader look at Mr. Clinton's final pardon list makes clear that the outrage extends well beyond the undeserved leniency for Mr. Rich.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com