Asked by Charlie kirk jr.

Example of indignant

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
"Indignant" means feeling or showing anger or annoyance at what is perceived as unfair treatment. Examples:

Single-sentence examples
- She gave an indignant gasp. "I would never do that!"
- He looked indignant when they suggested he’d cheated on the exam.
- The customer wrote an indignant email demanding a refund.
- "How dare you!" she said, indignant and flushed.

Short dialogues
- A: "You paid more than everyone else." B: "That’s not true," he said, indignant. "I followed the pricing exactly."
- A: "You forgot my name again." B: "I did not!" she snapped, indignant. "I've told you twice."

Different registers
- Formal/written: The senator issued an indignant statement rejecting the allegations.
- Casual: "Ugh, that’s so unfair," he said, indignantly.

Nonverbal cues often paired with indignation
- Raised voice or sharp tone
- Crossed arms, a hard stare, flushed face
- Quick, sharp gestures (pointing, snapping)

Synonyms: outraged, offended, insulted, offended. Antonyms: placid, complacent, unbothered.

If you want examples tailored to a character, age, or situation (workplace, parent/child, fantasy setting), tell me which and I’ll give a few.