Phrases with «high dudgeon»

The phrase "high dudgeon" means being very angry, offended, or indignant about something. Full definition

Sentences with «high dudgeon»

  • Lady Bird will quit the club in high dudgeon when she's overlooked for all the main parts in a production of Shakespeare's Tempest, but meanwhile has found a boyfriend in Danny (Lucas Hedges), a sweet young man who tells her he respects her too much to touch her breasts. (independent.ie)
  • But Republican Rob Astorino's campaign has been strangely ineffective, because it takes the same tone of high dudgeon on Moreland that it took on fake scandals (remember the attacks on Cuomo's tax assessment?). (timesunion.com)
  • To bail out in high dudgeon on an issue too obscure for most voters to empathise with or understand would mean the Lib Dems reaping a bitter electoral harvest. (conservativehome.blogs.com)
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