umbrage

Related to umbrage: take umbrage

take umbrage

To become offended or angered by something. Hey, I take umbrage at the idea that I didn't put my full effort into this project.
See also: take, umbrage

take umbrage at (something)

To become offended or angered by something. Hey, I take umbrage at the idea that I didn't put my full effort into this project.
See also: take, umbrage
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

take umbrage at something

to feel that one has been insulted by something. The employee took umbrage at not getting a raise. Mary took umbrage at the suggestion that she was being unreasonable.
See also: take, umbrage
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

take umbrage

Feel resentment, take offense, as in Aunt Agatha is quick to take umbrage at any suggestion to do things differently. This expression features one of the rare surviving uses of umbrage, which now means "resentment" but comes from the Latin umbra, for "shade," and presumably alludes to the "shadow" of displeasure. [Late 1600s]
See also: take, umbrage
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

take ˈumbrage (at something)

(formal or humorous) be offended or angry because of something, often without a good reason: She took umbrage at my remarks about her hair.
See also: take, umbrage
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

take umbrage, to

To feel slighted; to take offense. The word “umbrage,” which comes from the Latin umbra, meaning “shade” or “shadow,” is rarely heard today except in this expression. Presumably the analogy here is to the shade or shadow of displeasure. A 1934 interview with Alan Dent used it with a play on words: “Interviewer: Can ghosts be angry?—Dent: What else is there to do in the shades except take umbrage?” (quoted in James Agate, Ego, March 11, 1934; cited in Penguin Dictionary of Modern Quotations).
See also: take
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • take umbrage
  • take umbrage at
  • take umbrage at (something)
  • take umbrage, to
  • bridle
  • bridle at
  • bridle at (someone or something)
  • no offense taken
  • take (something) in good part
  • take something in good part
References in periodicals archive
Forgive me, but I'm not prepared to join this walk down Great Umbrage Street just yet.
Divided Portraits: Identity and Disability, Hilary Cooper (Umbrage Editions): Trained in portraiture, Hilary Cooper began
Workmen in the farming town of Kerikeri were repairing the main street when the young woman tourist took umbrage at their attention.
MAY I say, I take umbrage at Chief Superintendent Geraint Anwyl and Alun Lewis (Daily Post, March 6).
Since Keisling presided over the establishment of Oregon's vote-by-mail system (VBM), his umbrage at Rubin's "casually dismissive half-sentence" characterizing VBM as a "terribly insecure system" is understandable, but his defense of VBM is hardly unbiased.
But it is that brother's wife, Herodias, who truly takes umbrage. Herod plays the double game of arresting John "on account of Herodias," while simultaneously fearing and protecting him.
After the release of the AI report, Bush and several members of his administration immediately took umbrage at the claims.
Perkins took umbrage and sent out an e-mail with a rather unflattering photo of me.
While some say Dubai verges on being ridiculous, Jonathan Howell-Jones, a marketing official with Dubai Internet City who relocated from rainy Britain, takes umbrage. "We're here, right?
At one point, the People's Daily interviewer asked why the Post describes China as a "dictator communist regime without democracy and freedom." Bennett took umbrage at this, not wanting to be mistaken for some reactionary.
Then he takes umbrage at the suggestion that some Palestinian refugees might settle in the countries where they have been living for the last 50 years.
Editor: As a retired professional forester, I take umbrage with the editorial by Ms.
As I climbed the 247 steep stone steps divided into four narrow tiers to the pyramid's summit, many of my fellow pilgrims expressed their umbrage at the new Wal-Mart, in plain sight down below, just 2,000 meters away.
I take no umbrage at your questioning his policies, but I feel that this editorial gives voters (and especially your the idea that a vote for Kerry be better than a vote for Mr.
Never ones to pass up an opportunity to be offended, these groups have risen up to take umbrage at the dolls' immoral lifestyle--proving yet again that nothing is too frivolous to escape their notice.