View example sentences and word forms for Indignantly.

Indignantly

Indignantly | Indignant

Indignantly meaning

In an indignant manner.

Example sentences (16)

She indignantly said to the fans, “You boo me?

On "nuance," the Dutch/tulip thing is a good example from the past, but an even more complicated, current one is the war in Gaza where many are rallying indignantly around the undeniable victims.

She said: “Within our homes or workplaces, amongst loved ones or colleagues, we all experience trying to piece together indignantly expressed, absolutely believed, yet utterly contradictory truths.

The president indignantly cast the calls for him to step down as an affront to the millions of voters who had turned out to support him during the primaries.

I’ve noticed that Facebook posts seem less critical on the one hand now, and more indignantly righteous on the other.

The owner indignantly replied "in Australia you eat takeaway fish and chips with your fingers".

Keep thinking of my aunt on Facebook, telling me indignantly that the country was in a mess because Labour caused the 2008 banking crisis.

When you indignantly reply to an ugly comment, you’re giving them exactly what they want.

The independents have long charged indignantly that big-company dealers deliberately poison customer minds about trade-in values of smaller-company products.

When I found nothing but a depleted package filled with a few sad crumbles, I indignantly showed it to my wife as if some master thief had slipped past the palace guards and absconded with the crown jewels.

At such a moment, he continued indignantly, one was bound to recall the funeral of Pushkin and the Tsar's courtiers – their miserable hypocrisy and false pride.

At that instant, Harold's mother enters and seeing what she presumes is a dead girl, declares indignantly, "Harold!

Borges indignantly refused, calling it a ridiculous demand.

During the temporary absence of the two men, she meets Cecily, each woman indignantly declaring that she is the one engaged to "Ernest".

He indignantly repudiates the fanatical view of some coreligionists that all non-Jews have no souls —a belief reciprocated by the Gentiles of the time.

Mrs. Dashwood indignantly speeds her search for a new home.