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
- 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