Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για umbrage
1. The protesters took umbrage with those statements.
2. Which brings us to "umbrage," as in "to take umbrage," an idiom meaning "to take offense." Umbrage comes from "shadow," like the much more common "umbrella" (an umbrella is a portable shadow one carries to protect from the sun). "To stand in umbrage" was once a common phrase to mean what we say when we describe someone as "under a cloud." But in more recent years – recent centuries, actually – umbrage is generally something one takes rather than stands under.
3. Perhaps that word umbrage should read resentment or vice versa.
4. The city‘s umbrage relates to another area of Mamila, though.
5. But once you "take" umbrage – where do you put it?