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Tara2 Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

It has an sense of outrage to it for me

Can you please explain"It has an sense of outrage to it for me"?

"Ludicrous", to me, has a different kind of negative judgement as a connotation. It has an sense of outrage to it for me. "The amount of gasoline consumed by the average American is ludicrous." "Eating whatever we want and then complaining about being overweight is ludicrous!" Again, I wouldn't say, "You look ludicrous in that outfit."

  

Top answer

Tara2 It has an sense of outrage to it for me. ) It means that the word "ludicrous" seems for the writer to be a word that shows that the person who uses it is outraged (very angry; indignant) about something. CJ

  • Tara2 It has an sense of outrage to it for me.
  • ) It means that the word "ludicrous" seems for the writer to be a word that shows that the person who uses it is outraged (very angry; indignant) about something.
  • CJ
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1 Answers
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Tara2It has an sense of outrage to it for me. ("to it" is not really necessary.)

It means that the word "ludicrous" seems for the writer to be a word that shows that the person who uses it is outraged (very angry; indignant) about something.

CJ

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