Sentences with phrase «growing outrage»

The phrase "growing outrage" means that more people are getting angrier and more upset about something over time. Full definition
It's impossible to say whether a fiscal crisis, or growing outrage over the alarming numbers, might prompt corrective action before that happens.
Ken Clarke partially backed down on plans to hold court cases in private today, amid growing outrage from civil liberties groups.
What he hasn't mentioned, as he's channeled the public's growing outrage toward LIPA, is that he's had the ability to do something about it all along.
Ever since the Stupak abortion coverage ban was approved by the House, there has been growing outrage across the country.
But then the horrifying terrorist outrage happens; Akin handles the emotional devastation reasonably well, along with the rancour between Katja's elderly mother Annemarie (Karin Neuhauser) and Nuri's parents Ali (Asim Demirel) and Hülya (Aysel Iscan) and then Katya's growing outrage at the suspicion that the police intend to wrap up the investigation by blaming Nuri's former associates.
Instead of responding to the growing outrage around the issue, the premier seems to be hoping it will just blow over.
«There's just this growing outrage over the things he says and the things he does,» said Whitney Crispell, who organized the protest.
Citing the works of Mike Nichols, Sydney Pollack, Woody Allen and James L Brooks (there's more than a hint of Broadcast News in Josh's growing outrage at the malleability of his chosen medium), Baumbach talks of looking back to the «adult comedies the studios used to make», perhaps acknowledging his own move from the indie sidelines into something more mainstream.
Meanwhile, in South Korea, there is growing outrage over a program to develop offensive robots jointly created by the country's top engineering university KAIST — the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology — and Korean conglomerate Hanhwa, which among other product lines is one of the largest producers of munitions for the country.
Six years later, amid the growing outrage from the Stoneman Douglas massacre, the bank sounds very different.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z