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28 Sentences With "taken umbrage"

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

Pakistan, meanwhile, has taken umbrage at India's rising influence in Afghanistan.
Bankers have taken umbrage at Dutch laws that limit the size of bonus payments.
It's a representation of Chinese food that at least one food blogger has taken umbrage with.
That last part is certainly debatable, but it's not the primary thing the internet has taken umbrage with.
Students have taken umbrage to the accusations, and have recounted episodes of discrimination on campus and in town.
Emma Watson has taken umbrage with critics who say her posing braless for Vanity Fair makes her a bad feminist.
Many Republicans have also taken umbrage with Democrats' procedural maneuvers, such as Pelosi's decision to not hold a formal vote authorizing the impeachment inquiry.
More recently, Mr. Peña Nieto has taken umbrage at Mr. Trump's decision last week to send National Guard troops to patrol the southern border.
But Anthony Hawk, long-time purveyor of fine video games and friend of Gizmodo, has taken umbrage with the Unicode Consortium's depiction of his stock and trade.
But Trump has increasingly taken umbrage at the fact that Fox News doesn't feature even more MAGA voices, and in recent days, he's posted tweets blasting Smith, Williams, and Brazile.
In particular, diners have taken umbrage with how long it now takes for their Quarter Pounders to cook, especially when purchasing food at the drive-thru, according to a recent Reuters report.
Plenty of New York art world figures have taken umbrage at the Museum of Modern Art, but the painter Ben Morea may be the only one who has managed to shut it down.
Since the game went live for EA Access and Origin Access subscribers late last week, players have taken umbrage with the various currency systems and how those affect unlockable upgrades, known as Star Cards.
I can see now that the Welch family could easily have been offended, and in fact the entire Welsh nation might have taken umbrage — another batch of unpleasant Haight mail headed for Will's mailbox.
Some have taken umbrage with the idea that titans of industry, from their thrones of extreme wealth, are taking pity on those whom they may well have exploited to get to the pinnacle of capitalism.
Erdogan has taken umbrage at the response by Western allies to last month's coup attempt, accusing them of failing to condemn those behind the coup, and being overly critical of the sweeping crackdown he launched in its wake.
Fans of the webslinger have taken umbrage with recent remarks from the studio's CEO who, while explaining how capable his production team would be in handling Spider-Man going forward, took a dig at Marvel head Kevin Feige.
Further on, he says it's OK to wave down your bartender, because anyone who doesn't see you must obviously not be paying attention, a fact that almost every bartender commenting on the story seems to have taken umbrage with.
Pilate could easily have taken umbrage at the prisoner's effrontery, but Schiavone suggests that he was already enamored of Jesus' charisma and his equanimity, while his answer to the charge of claiming to be king of the Jews upended Jewish theocratic claims.
Like many money managers and investors, Mr. Cooperman, the 76-year-old former hedge fund manager, has taken umbrage at Ms. Warren's critique of the finance industry and like others on Wall Street predicts there will be stock-market losses if she were to win the presidency.
What we know about the new 'Ghostbusters' Critics have taken umbrage with everything from remaking the 1984 original (considered a classic) with a female cast to the fact that star Leslie Jones -- the only African-American lead actress in the film -- portrays the only Ghostbuster who is not a scientist.
"Trump has continuously shown where he stands on the issue of white supremacy, the most recent example being his egregious response to Charlottesville," said Jason Ajiake, a Howard student and organizer with HUResist, a student-led group that has fiercely opposed Frederick and more recently taken umbrage at the school's invitation of James Comey to speak at its convocation ceremony and be a guest lecturer.
Krishnachandra's courtiers pointed out that they had taken umbrage at being presented something not forbidden but against custom, but that they expected Krishnachandra to accept their own unorthodox proposal. With the opposition of Krishnachandra, Rajballabh failed to achieve the change he sought. Another legend connected to Krishnachandra involved the conflict between his diwan, Raghunandan, and Manikchandra, then diwan of Burdwan but in future to become raja himself. After Raghunandan and Manikchandra quarreled, Manikchandra accused the other man of theft and had sufficient power to order and see to his execution.
Benton, a southerner and slave owner, became increasingly uncomfortable with the topic. He was also at odds with fellow Democrats, such as John C. Calhoun, who he thought put their opinions ahead of the Union to a treasonous degree. With troubled conscience, in 1849 he declared himself "against the institution of slavery," putting him against his party and popular opinion in his state. In April 1850, during heated Senate floor debates over the proposed Compromise of 1850, Benton was nearly shot by pistol-wielding Mississippi Senator Henry S. Foote, who had taken umbrage to Benton's vitriolic sparring with Vice- President Millard Fillmore.
The story draws on religious themes, interweaving gypsy traditions, belief in the intervening power of the Virgin Mary, and the hope of God's forgiveness and redemption, into the Spanish tradition of bullfighting. The action occurs during Holy Week in Spain, and Michener competently captures the religious processions. He provides meticulous detail of bull fights (although some reviewers have taken umbrage at supposedly erroneous details in his narrative). The tale involves a Gypsy matador (Lazaro López), his sister (Magdalena López) who reads fortunes, a cross-eyed Virgin Mary (La Bizca), the American writer (Shenstone), the Spanish bull breeder (Don Cayetano Mota) who is struggling to revive his once-famed herd, and of course the many bulls in Mota's herd.
President of the Universal Society of Hinduism, Rajan Zed claimed that the ad could potentially have an adverse effect on meat sales overseas. Additionally, while the MLA has claimed that the response to the 'You'll Never Lamb Alone' campaign was for the most part positive, some in the Indigenous community have claimed that the advert is highly offensive. The aforementioned campaign that depicts early settlement has seen viewers taken umbrage at the complete commission of references to Australia Day, while others within the Indigenous community have since criticised the advert. During the advert, as Dutch, English, German and other early settlers alike arrive, their interaction between indigenous and non-indigenous people has reportedly tried to make light of Australia's past few years.
The delusion spread, many were apprehended, most of whom were imprisoned. During the 16-month duration of the Salem witch trials phenomenon, 19 persons were hanged, and one, Giles Corey, was pressed to death. During a 1692 sermon, Parris declared that "as in our text [John 6:10] there was one [devil] among the 12 [disciples]… so in our churches God knows how many Devils there are," encouraging antagonistic villagers to locate and destroy "witches" who, as it happened, were frequently individuals with whom Parris and his key allies, the Putnam family, had taken umbrage. As Parris had been an active prosecutor in the witchcraft cases, in 1693, his parish brought charges against Parris for his part in the trials.. Parris apologized in his essay Meditations for Peace, which he presented in November 1694.
The monumental propylaeum gate from the inside Roman Domus Ancient Tyndaris was strategically situated on its prominent hill overlooking the wide bay of the Tyrrhenian Sea bounded by the Punta di Milazzo on the east, and the Capo Calavà on the west. It was one of the latest of all the cities in Sicily that could claim a purely Greek origin, having been founded by the elder Dionysius in 396 or 395 BC. The original settlers were the remains of the Messenian exiles, who had been driven from Naupactus, Zacynthus, and the Peloponnese by the Spartans after the close of the Peloponnesian War. These had at first been established by Dionysius at Messana, when he repeopled that city; but the Spartans having taken umbrage at this, he transferred them to the site of Tyndaris, which had previously been included in the territory of Abacaenum. The colonists themselves gave to their new city the name of Tyndaris, from their native divinities, the "Tyndaridae" or Dioscuri, and readily admitting fresh citizens from other quarters, soon raised their whole population to the number of 5000 citizens.

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