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  1. Dictionary
    umbrage
    /ˈʌmbrɪdʒ/

    noun

    • 1. offence or annoyance: "she took umbrage at his remarks"
    • 2. shade or shadow, especially as cast by trees. archaic

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. UMBRAGE definition: 1. to feel upset or annoyed, usually because you feel that someone has been rude or shown no…. Learn more.

  3. UMBRAGE meaning: 1. to feel upset or annoyed, usually because you feel that someone has been rude or shown no…. Learn more.

  4. The meaning of UMBRAGE is a feeling of pique or resentment at some often fancied slight or insult. How to use umbrage in a sentence. Did you know? Synonym Discussion of Umbrage.

  5. noun. 1. OLD-FASHIONED, Poetic, Obsolete. shade; shadow. 2. foliage, considered as shade-giving. 3. offense or resentment. to take umbrage at a remark. 4. Archaic. a semblance or shadowy appearance.

  6. Definition of umbrage noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. When someone takes umbrage at something, they find it offensive, and it probably makes them angry. Umbrage comes from the same source as umbrella, the Latin umbra, "shade, shadow."

  8. Umbrage definition: offense; annoyance; displeasure. See examples of UMBRAGE used in a sentence.

  9. 1. offense; displeasure: to take umbrage at someone's rudeness. 2. the slightest feeling of suspicion, doubt, hostility, or the like. 3. leafy shade, as tree foliage. 4. shade or shadows. [1400–50; late Middle English < Old French; see umbra, -age]

  10. umbrage. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English um‧brage /ˈʌmbrɪdʒ/ noun → take umbrage (at something) Examples from the Corpus umbrage • The Republicans, naturally, take umbrage at predictions about what they might do. • If they take umbrage, then they were never a proper friend in the first place.

  11. A semblance or shadowy appearance. Webster's New World. Feeling of doubt. Wiktionary. Synonyms: offence. offense. shadow. wrath. trace. suspicion. shelter. rage. protection. outrage. offend.