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indignant
/ ɪnˈdɪɡnənt /
adjective
- feeling or showing indignation
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Derived Forms
- inˈdignantly, adverb
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Other Words From
- in·dig·nant·ly adverb
- half-in·dig·nant adjective
- su·per·in·dig·nant adjective
- un·in·dig·nant adjective
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Word History and Origins
Origin of indignant1
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Word History and Origins
Origin of indignant1
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Example Sentences
And what about those liberal activists who made the young Scalia and Thomas so indignant?
Black thinkers do not make bone-deep, censoriously indignant statements on CNN.
He was also frequently becoming indignant, refusing to take orders from higher-ranked soldiers if they had not served in combat.
And for every excited gentrifier, there is a horrified, indignant NIMBY.
This has been the source of some indignant tweeting from Karachi.
But Lucy had noted, out of the corner of her watchful eye, the arrival of Miss Grains, indignant and perspiring.
The injured and indignant animal gave vent to a succession of eldritch screams.
"Then he neglects his duties, that's all," replied the old gentleman with an indignant snort.
Marceau, indignant at being rebuked by a young staff officer, roughly asked, "And who are you?"
The social ambitions of the Tippetts were so definitely quenched that the indignant millionaire threatened to return to Chicago.
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