Indignation and anger mixed with his sobs, marking them right away as different.
From the sacbee.com
Many of them do a 180-degree reversal, from willful silence to wild indignation.
From the kentucky.com
All the politically correct indignation would be bad for their public relations.
From the economist.com
But growing public indignation and media pressure made it difficult to hold off.
From the economist.com
To do this, you have to have a bit of fire in your belly and bit of indignation.
From the smh.com.au
Muffling his own indignation, he tells how the bureaucracy added insult to loss.
From the time.com
His indignation seems always in the service of compassion, not of vengefulness.
From the guardian.co.uk
I don't see why that's considered a normal thing.'His voice rises in indignation.
From the telegraph.co.uk
Many seemed driven by a simmering sense of indignation at Detroit's status quo.
From the freep.com
More examples
A feeling of righteous anger
(indignant) angered at something unjust or wrong; "an indignant denial"; "incensed at the judges' unfairness"; "a look of outraged disbelief"; "umbrageous at the loss of their territory"
Anger is a feeling related to one's perception of having been offended/wronged and a tendency to undo that wrongdoing by retaliation. R. Novaco recognized three modalities of anger: cognitive (appraisals), somatic-affective (tension and agitations) and behavioral (withdrawal and antagonism). ...
IndigNation was Singapore's inaugural, month-long gay pride celebration held in August 2005 to coincide with the republic's 40th National Day. It has since become an annual event in the local LGBT calendar, held throughout the month of August.
Indignation is a novel by Philip Roth, released by Houghton Mifflin on September 16, 2008 . It is his twenty-ninth book.
An anger aroused by something perceived as an indignity, notably an offense or injustice; A self-righteous anger or disgust
(indignant) (adj) - moved by anger or scorn
(indignant) feeling or expressing anger or scorn, especially at unjust, mean, or ungrateful action or treatment.
Roth's twenty-ninth book, (2008) is set in 1951, it follows Marcus Messner's departure from Newark to Ohio's Winesburg College, where he begins his sophomore year.