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Synonyms
of·fend (ə-fĕnd́)

[Middle English offenden, from Old French offendre, from Latin offendere.]

verb: -fend·ed, -fend·ing, -fends. 

transitive verb 

  1. To cause displeasure, anger, resentment, or wounded feelings in.
  2. To be displeasing or disagreeable to: Onions offend my sense of smell.
    1. To transgress; violate: offend all laws of humanity.
    2. To cause to sin.

intransitive verb 

  1. To result in displeasure: Bad manners may offend.
    1. To violate a moral or divine law; sin.
    2. To violate a rule or law: offended against the curfew.

synonyms:

offend, insult, affront, outrage These verbs mean to cause resentment, humiliation, or hurt. To offend is to cause displeasure, wounded feelings, or repugnance in another: “He often offended men who might have been useful friends” (John Lothrop Motley) Insult implies gross insensitivity, insolence, or contemptuous rudeness: “I . . . refused to stay any longer in the room with him, because he had insulted me” (Anthony Trollope) To affront is to insult openly, usually intentionally: “He continued to belabor the poor woman in a studied effort to affront his hated chieftain” (Edgar Rice Burroughs) Outrage implies the flagrant violation of a person's integrity, pride, or sense of right and decency: “Agnes . . . was outraged by what seemed to her Rose's callousness” (Mrs. Humphry Ward)