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55 Sentences With "take umbrage"

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

But I really take umbrage at this GIF: Me. You.
Others take umbrage at remakes of classic horror films. Me?
Other times, they take umbrage, and the controversy becomes public.
If government bond issues take umbrage, however… not so good. Currency.
Mr. Sessions seemed to take umbrage at the president's latest message.
Miller would surely take umbrage at losing out on titles to drugs cheats.
But I must take umbrage at Apple's position regarding the unlocking of a terrorist's cellphone.
What I take umbrage with are cases like the nude vacuuming scene in Working Girl.
Their detractors take umbrage with more ideological issues before the band have strummed a single note.
They take umbrage at definitions that would restrict the type of acts or scenes in porn.
But I can't help but take umbrage with each time she joked about coming for Jay's job.
I, as an editor with more than 40 years' experience, take umbrage at the trivializing of my professional work.
Mr. Fieg, reasonably enough, appeared to take umbrage at the question of where to find the Kith in his collaborations.
Mr. Trump himself seemed to take umbrage at the suggestion that he needed China's approval to speak with Ms. Tsai.
Some Rubio supporters take umbrage at what Cruz is trying to do, even as they crow that he will be unsuccessful.
I was mindblown by the things people criticize on online review sites, and the minor "issues" with which people take umbrage.
Lettuce lovers may take umbrage to this, but the McChicken I ate had too much iceberg and not enough chicken flavor.
But, really, how dare people take umbrage at her insult of a show many of them can't be bothered to watch?
Understandably, those of us who were victims of this attack take umbrage at the suggestion that this is merely a Trump problem.
I am fully aware that this may make me sound anti-relationship (something my partner of seven years may take umbrage at).
There is a very vocal minority of well-credentialed AARP members, however, who took, and continue to take, umbrage to Bautista's celebration.
Erdogan is still likely to take umbrage with this decision, arguing that it conflicts with the terms of the migrant deal agreed in March.
How better to feed that case than to misrepresent, and then take umbrage at, the president's tough talk on a psychotic Latin American gang?
And the nuances involved in the technical details of Google's changes are guaranteed to get lost should anyone in Congress take umbrage over them.
But I don't see myself joining those ranks anytime soon, and take umbrage with the idea that FIRE is the ultimate progression in personal finance.
The cast seemed also to take umbrage at the press coverage — their uniformly anti-media takes were positively Trump-like — that implied the show manipulates them.
All right, we'll pause it, but if you actually know about the Roman stoics, you're probably going to take umbrage with a big part of this conversation.
The base serves as the nerve center for the country's drone program (officials take umbrage at the term drone – these aircrafts are not your tech friend's hobby toy).
But what was once an endearing homage to a fable has become a literary battlefield, as some Tolkien fans take umbrage to the techies' appropriation of their beloved work.
Those who reject the proposition that women too readily take umbrage supported Hillary Clinton by a 56 point margin, while those who agreed favored Trump by over 2023 points.
There was no doubt that roughly half the country would take umbrage at whatever decision was arrived at, especially now that Clinton is the presumptive Democratic nominee for president.
"I take umbrage when I see scientists saying there's a causal relationship between marijuana and negative brain outcomes," says Margaret Haney, director of the Marijuana Research Laboratory at Columbia University.
Guys. Please. Staaaaaaahhhhhhp. Coinciding with the 10-month anniversary of the release of the Wells Report, the New England Patriots have updated their We Take Umbrage With The Wells Report WordPress blog.
Of course, if one is going to take umbrage with the IOC, itself no stranger to accusations of greed and corruption, there are much larger, more important issues with which to concern oneself.
READ MORE: British Landlord Tycoon Bans 'Coloured People' Because of 'Curry Smell' While many take umbrage at Ramsay's remark and have labelled it racist, Rameez himself seems to be pretty happy with how the interaction turned out.
It is pointed out to him that the reason they may not have reached out to him since he became pope is that they're hippies, and presumably take umbrage with the hard line Pius has decreed as pope.
And his communications director slung mud about Bloomberg's health -- she later said she had misspoken -- as she appeared to take umbrage at the very idea that a man in his late 70s should be up-front about his health.
Thrown into that mix is the fact that White House chief of staff John Kelly is very close to Nielsen -- she followed him into the DHS job -- and might take umbrage at her firing (or forced resignation) and step aside himself.
In an interview, Georgia's prime minister, Giorgi Kvirikashvili, said the papal visit was "very important as Georgia gets closer to Europe and the West in general," and he said he saw no reason for anyone to take umbrage at the pope's presence.
If I felt that I were targeted — and these are the same people Hillary Clinton demeaned with her ill-advised "deplorables" characterization — I would take umbrage at such an insult and ignore the rantings of what I viewed as the pathetic crybaby left.
I don't take umbrage with any of TEFAF's ostentatious finery because I think it may be one of the few art fairs that's sincere and transparent in its mission: to sell art to the one percent without revising the historical canon or aiming for accessibility.
Some folks might take umbrage with the rapper's claim that his daughter got accepted on her own, though -- he and Jimmy Iovine founded the USC Jimmy Iovine and Andre Young Academy a few years back ... and there's a hall on campus named after them.
" But Suzette didn't take umbrage at Jenner donning the commemorative tee: "And then I think Kylie [Jenner] last year was wearing a Selena shirt, and that didn't come as a surprise, either," she said, "because they are fans of Selena and our music, so it was cool.
Donald Trump's withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal last week was the catalyst for the event, but Sanders said he feels it's also serving a "need to develop what I call a progressive foreign policy," an assertion that veterans of the Obama administration may take umbrage with.
And although most New Zealanders say they are proud of their country's multicultural mix, a few take umbrage at an upsurge of immigration: annual net migration (new arrivals minus departing locals) has risen to over 70,000 in the country of fewer than 5m people, 16 times as many as in 2008.
When fired FBI director James Comey torched the White House last summer for spreading falsehoods about his leadership of the Bureau and the morale among its ranks — "Those were lies, plain and simple," he told Congress — Sarah Huckabee Sanders seemed to take umbrage that anyone would dare suggest the president is loose with the truth.
This in itself causes the slimy mooks to take umbrage, and as Mia (Melissa Bolona) is outside calling her fiancé (who is at a strip club, with Mia's approval), they pull up in a van, pull her in, inject her with a potentially lethal drug, and take her to be prepared for human trafficking.
" The German railway company appeared to take umbrage, first thanking her on Twitter "for supporting us railroad workers in the fight against climate change!" but adding, "It would have been even nicer if you had also reported how friendly and competent you were looked after by our team at your seat in first class.
Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpFed saw risks to US economy fading before coronavirus spread quickened Pro-Trump super PAC hits Biden with new Spanish-language ad in Nevada Britain announces immigration policy barring unskilled migrants MORE is by no means the nation's first chief executive to take umbrage at the coverage he receives from the press.
When you use a Twitter account and you put your point of view into it, you&aposve stepped across the line from journalism into advocacy, and the problem we have is that journalism has become a lost art and when the President says, "You know, we have a lot of fake news," they get all up on their high horse and they take umbrage to it.
Many of Warren and Sarah Brown's descendants still live in the greater Hampton Falls area and take umbrage at the rewriting of their family's history.
Danny also pays Kay's bill when she takes a room at a hotel where he works as a busboy, rescuing her when she has no money. Danny and Kay decide to become a dance team but need a sponsor. They go to Aunt Adelaide's sweetheart, Abner Kelly, who agrees, but Otis Barnett gets wind of it, pressures Abner and scuttles the deal, frustrating Danny. Ginger O'Brien, his little sister, befriends Kay and the family enjoys becoming acquainted with her, only to take umbrage when they discover Otis is her father and she's not who she seemed to be.
In the Irish Calendar The Old Cows Days/The Days of the Brindled Cow are the last days of March and the first three days of April; in . The term comes from a folk tale, illustrating the unpredictability of the weather at this time of year in Ireland. The tale relates how the bó riabhach, "the brindled cow", complained at the beginning of April to her companions in the herd of the terrible harshness of the previous month of March. As the grumbling of the cow continued, the at first uninterested March began to take umbrage and decided to teach the speckled cow a lesson she would never forget.
Peter O'Toole is Peter Plunkett, the owner of a dilapidated Irish castle which has been converted to a bed and breakfast supplying the only employment for the local villagers. Owing money to an Irish-American businessman by the name of Brogan, Plunkett has the idea to turn the castle into "the most haunted castle in Europe" for the tourist trade, inspired by his mother's stories of the castle's history of ghosts. He and his wacky staff of Irish characters set about creating ghost costumes and effects for their first group of American lodgers. At first annoyed by the inept hauntings, the American guests (including Steve Guttenberg, Beverly D'Angelo, Connie Booth, Peter Gallagher and Jennifer Tilly) soon get what they paid for as the genuine ghosts of Castle Plunkett take umbrage with being cheaply exploited and stage a full-scale paranormal event.
Actually, Den has no intention of grassing, but the investigating officer, D.I. West, decides to play up to The Firm's fears, spreading rumours that Den is on the verge of implicating them. Gregory Mantel (Pavel Douglas), a superior member of The Firm, makes plans to have Den eradicated from within prison. Joanne does not believe that Den is an informant and she tries to do everything she can to stop her associates from setting up a hit on him, even going above Mantel's head and relaying her doubts to Mr Vinnicombe, which earns her the wrath of Mantel, but manages to spare Den's life temporarily. Joanne moves into a flat in Albert Square and continues running Strokes, but her position is put in jeopardy when a new Detective Inspector, Bob Ashley (Robin Lermitte), starts to take umbrage with her presence in Walford.

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