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57 Sentences With "feel aggrieved"

How to use feel aggrieved in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "feel aggrieved" and check conjugation/comparative form for "feel aggrieved". Mastering all the usages of "feel aggrieved" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Feel aggrieved that a social network took down your post?
Everyone is encouraged to feel aggrieved (everyone except white males).
This is one of many reasons why frontline communities feel aggrieved.
They feel aggrieved by the image of people getting money without working.
Whatever the outcome, the hardcore MAGA crowd will feel aggrieved and jacked up.
Juha Kinnunen, analyst at Inderes Equity Research, said customers were likely to feel aggrieved.
But Parsons is hardly the only one to feel aggrieved by MLS's actions lately.
Both former Soviet states feel aggrieved that Brussels in not making good on its promises.
And they feel aggrieved by the lackadaisical approach governments and institutions have taken to the problem.
Juha Kinnunen, analyst at Inderes Equity Research, however said that some customers were likely to feel aggrieved.
They feel aggrieved that the Nigerian government has not adequately addressed the civil war and its aftermath.
Will employees just above the level feel aggrieved or seek a salary cut to reduce their health costs?
But, for the most part, we encouraged him in his conquest because it made the seniors feel aggrieved.
Even so, airlines and passengers should feel aggrieved that there will be one less company to buy planes from.
This dynamic of humiliation-defeat-resurrection-revenge appeals to something primal in many people, especially when they feel aggrieved.
Whoever the Senate disbelieves will feel aggrieved, and may have been badly wronged (as Ms Hill did and perhaps was).
Should first-generation immigrants from Algeria feel aggrieved if they are still not seen as fully French after twenty years in the country?
Beto O'Rourke (D-Texas), it's no wonder that Sanders supporters feel aggrieved at the idea of backroom deals depriving Sanders of the nomination.
"The Cameroon English speaking community feel aggrieved, feel marginalized," said Professor Ernest Molou at the university campus in the southwestern town of Buea.
Many Turkish smokers feel aggrieved by the changes, and reports that smoking bans may be extended to parks and other outdoor spaces distress them further.
On immigration, he advocates cutting legal as well as illegal immigration, drawing cheers from working-class supporters who feel aggrieved by economic and cultural change.
Soldiers are not the only people to feel aggrieved: teachers and civil servants have also gone on strike recently, notes Mamadou Diallo, a consultant in Abidjan.
But whichever the source of Big Tech's misery, it tracked back to the Injustice Rule, which can turn situations when large numbers of people feel aggrieved.
The international alt-right has, at its core, the explicit rejection of equality and the pursuit of identity and status for white men who feel aggrieved.
When we feel aggrieved, we often want the other person to suffer in some way that will help us feel that the debt has been paid.
I understand that you feel aggrieved about 'Bake Off,' but it's just worth remembering that the BBC lost 'Bake Off,' Channel 4 didn't take 'Bake Off.
The blue House will provide him with fresh fodder for his Twitter rants and a new place to focus his wrath and make his base feel aggrieved.
When that happens, those who feel aggrieved can divide the land, taking their share as an individual or as part of a group - then sometimes selling that land.
And so the K.K.R. decision seems to channel shareholders into seeking appraisal rights if they feel aggrieved, and we will find out if that happens in the ExamWorks case.
A movement organized around building a community of contrarians — those who feel aggrieved and disenfranchised, and who prioritize conflict and winning over all else — is quite literally tailor-made for the internet.
Cybersecurity types, meanwhile, feel aggrieved that policemen and politicians do not seem to grasp what they view as a fundamental point: weakening security for the police's benefit inevitably weakens it for everyone.
Sanders supporters already feel aggrieved (if not downright cheated) that they haven't gotten a fair contest; Clinton and her supporters should be careful not to fan that anger by prematurely wrapping things up.
Yet many restaurateurs still feel aggrieved about the rating system; they talk of the health inspectors as arbitrary, unjust — and frightening enough to send an owner to the hospital with a panic attack.
African states have every right to feel aggrieved that, having decided who should control the web address of the continent, they are as powerless to enforce their wishes as they were in Berlin in 1884.
Von der Leyen's nomination by EU leaders has infuriated the Social Democrats (SPD), Merkel's coalition partners, who feel aggrieved that the leaders ignored the lead candidates from the main parliamentary blocs in their horse-trading over top posts.
If you feel aggrieved about your own personal status in society then political life is not just a disagreement about means, it's perceived as a status war against those who seem to think they are better than you.
It is true that there clearly would be constraints on the income of doctors and other service providers in a single-payer system, and many of them would surely feel aggrieved by any attempt to reduce their salaries.
But makers of GPS tracker smartwatches for kids are actively marketing their devices at parents as a product for enhancing kids' safety — so consumers might well have additional reasons to feel aggrieved if these products are not living up to their claims.
"If the Fed gets its paradigm wrong and sees inflation that ultimately doesn't materialize, and they take rates too far, then markets would feel aggrieved," said Carl Tannenbaum, chief economist at Northern Trust in Chicago, and a former senior risk official at the Fed Board.
That is what we see, for example, in the former East Germany: Despite huge financial aid from the west and generous social programs, "Ossis" feel aggrieved by what they see as second-class status, and they have given many of their votes to extreme right-wing parties.
When Team A has one win and one draw (say, against B and C, respectively), Team B is already eliminated before the last group match and may not give its best effort to defeat C. If C wins the group after beating an unmotivated Team B, Team A may feel aggrieved.
At the same time, Mr. Kelly's searing appearance at the White House — in which he described learning of his own son's death in battle — came as presidential aides feel aggrieved, under assault from all sides, unfairly treated by the news media and determined to rebut allegations that their boss is uncaring or a bigot.
But this was all make-believe, and it ended with this Peace (though it was conveniently revived in 1813).Schama, p. 438. The Prince had reason to feel aggrieved by this. He did have large patrimonial estates in the Netherlands that now were forfeit.
Elite overproduction is a concept developed by Peter Turchin, which describes the condition of a society which is producing too many potential elite-members relative to its ability to absorb them into the power structure. This he hypothesizes is a cause for social instability, as those left out of power feel aggrieved by their low status.
State Law Publisher of Western Australia Findings of WA Inc Royal Commission, Vol. 2, Ch. 8. Retrieved on 2 February 2013. Quotation: It is understandable that others should feel aggrieved by the seemingly irresistible advance of the Dempster machine after the closing date and wonder how this "inside running" could have been achieved without some impropriety somewhere.
The Libertas decree also says: [¶27, abridged] "The divine teaching of the Church brings the sure guidance of shining light. Therefore, there is no reason why true science should feel aggrieved at having to bear the restraint of laws by which, in the judgment of the Church, human teaching has to be controlled." Those principles and Tyndall's principles were profound enemies. Luckily for Tyndall he didn't need to get into a contest with them in Britain, nor in most other parts of the world.
The B&B; owners get to see their feedback once the guests have gone and it can leave them feeling slightly revengeful if they feel aggrieved by the comments. The guests also pay an amount of money based on their perceived value of the B&B; – if a guest believes it wasn't worth the money, they underpay. If they think it was worth the money, they pay exactly. And on rare occasions, guests have paid more than the stated cost of the B&B;, particularly if they felt the establishment was very good.
The government argues that authorising its citizens to concurrently hold foreign nationalities would be undesirable since, due to Singapore's geopolitical position, it cannot afford to allow its citizens multiple allegiances which may be compromised in times of national crisis. The government also fears that those without a second citizenship may feel aggrieved if dual citizens enjoy the benefits of citizenship during periods of wealth but leave the country in trying times. Nevertheless, the government is open to the possibility of allowing dual citizenship if local and global circumstances demand so.
Nandy's work explores celebrity and how it and on-line media impact cultural perceptions and has included research into why people feel aggrieved about the death of celebrities. Her PhD dissertation, "Celebrities in Canada: fame and national identity" is archived in the National Library of Australia. She has said that a popular music artist's back catalogue sales increase substantially after their death, because fans treat their work as a piece of immortality. She has taught at Curtin University in Australia, and Canada's Ryerson University and the University of Toronto.
After the election he received criticism in The New Zealand Herald and blogs for not disclosing details of his employment. In a press release, once he had been confirmed as a Member of Parliament, he revealed that he was a Department of Corrections senior corrections officer. He said that his contractual agreement with his employer prevented him from divulging this before he was appointed. In his maiden speech on 6 November 2014 Bindra pledged to confront the monsters who would stand against a fair and just society ... and ... defend the rights of all those who feel aggrieved and are.
Volksdeutscher Selbstschutz in Bydgoszcz (Bromberg), 1939. Before and during World War II, some ethnic Germans gathered around local Nazi organizations (sponsored financially by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Third Reich), actively supported the Nazis in countries such as Czechoslovakia, Poland and Yugoslavia. During the social and economic tensions of the Great Depression, some had begun to feel aggrieved with their minority status. They participated in espionage, sabotage and other Fifth column means in their countries of origin, trained and commanded by Abwehr. In November 1938 Nazi Germany organized German paramilitary units made out German minority members in Polish Pomerania that were to engage in diversion, sabotage as well as political murder and ethnic cleansing upon German invasion of Poland.
The play-off format had been developed to increase club revenues, as each club had been assured of at least two home fixtures after the home-and-away season. However, criticism remained, especially from the best performing clubs, as they had to navigate ten additional fixtures in order to earn promotion. Bristol had particular reason to feel aggrieved; in two seasons under the revamped format, they finished first in the table, but lost in the 2010 play-off final to Exeter and in the 2012 semi-finals to Cornish Pirates (in 2011, the final was contested between Worcester Warriors, who had won the league, and Cornish Pirates). As a result, the RFU eliminated pool play for both promotion and relegation.
It is known that in June 1329 he investigated the pillaging of the Earl of Lancaster's lands by the Coterels, and in 1331 he heard the complaint of the vicar of Bakewell over his eviction by the gang. Willoughby was notoriously corrupt—the royal yearbooks would later report Willoughby as selling the laws of the land "as if they were cattle or oxen"—and according to the near-contemporary Knighton's Chronicon, the Coterel associates had much to feel aggrieved about: Willoughby had been the judge in several cases against members of the group. He was, says Bellamy, "thus a fit subject for humiliation". His kidnap was almost certainly the chance for revenge "for some wrong or imagined wrong once suffered" as much as, if not more than, financial gain.
Despite a low-scoring start to the 2003 English cricket season, in which he passed 40 only once in his first seven innings of the season, he kept his place in the Test side for the visit of the touring Zimbabweans. Batting at number five in both Tests, Key failed to make much of an impact, scoring 18 runs in the first match and four in the second. He had reason to feel aggrieved at his first Test dismissal--umpire Steve Bucknor gave him out caught behind, despite Key not hitting the ball. His inclusion in the One Day International (ODI) squad for the following NatWest Series against Zimbabwe and South Africa owed more to the lack of available players than his own form; he had only passed 40 on one occasion going into the series.
A judicial review of MTAS was requested by pressure group Remedy UK, who demanded that the appointments process should be scrapped altogether. The case was heard in the High Court from 16 to 17 May 2007. On Wednesday 23 May 2007 Mr Justice Goldring ruled against Remedy UK, stating that "although far from ideal", the Review Group's decision on amending the appointments process after the first round of interviews was "within the range of reasonable responses", and that the Review Group was "entitled to reach the decision it did given the circumstances facing it at the time". Although he ruled against invalidating the interviews that had already taken place, Mr Justice Goldring added that this judgement did not imply that junior doctors were not entitled to feel aggrieved, as "the premature introduction of MTAS has had disastrous consequences".
The 2018 Bill Beaumont County Championship Division 1 was the 118th version of the annual, English rugby union, County Championship organised by the Rugby Football Union (RFU) for the top tier English counties. Each county drew its players from rugby union clubs from the third tier and below of the English rugby union league system (typically National League 1, National League 2 North or National League 2 South). The counties were divided into two regional sections (each divided into two pools, for a total of four) with the winners of each meeting in the final held at Twickenham Stadium. Lancashire are the reigning champions having defeated Cornwall in the previous year's final. Once again Lancashire finished as winners of the northern group stage with a 100% record to qualify for their second successive final, although group runners-up Yorkshire could feel aggrieved as they also had a 100% record, but lost out on points for/against.
A judicial review of MTAS was successfully called for by pressure group Remedy UK, who demanded that the appointments process should be scrapped altogether. The case was heard in the High Court from 16 to 17 May 2007, where the BMA sided with the government despite an overwhelming majority of their own membership opposing MTAS. On Wednesday 23 May 2007 Mr Justice Goldring ruled against Remedy UK, stating that "although far from ideal", the Review Group's decision on amending the appointments process after the first round of interviews was "within the range of reasonable responses", and that the Review Group was "entitled to reach the decision it did given the circumstances facing it at the time". Although he ruled against invalidating the interviews that had already taken place, Mr Justice Goldring added that this judgement did not imply that junior doctors were not entitled to feel aggrieved, as "the premature introduction of MTAS has had disastrous consequences".

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