Word familynounscandalizationscandalizerscandalousnessscandalmongerscandalmongeringscandalverbscandalizeadjectivescandalledscandalousadverbscandalously
scan·dal·ize (also scandalise British English) /ˈskændəl-aɪz/ verb [transitiveT]
SHOCKto make people feel very shocked 使震惊,使愤慨SYN shock
His outspoken views scandalized the nation.
他直言不讳的言论让全国震惊。
Examples from the Corpus
scandalize• Hayling, however, was scandalized.• That is perhaps a little unusual in First Ladies, and the White House residencestaff was slightly scandalized.• Her family was scandalized because she made no effort to hide what she was doing.• Margarett took a beau to their apartment for dinner and scandalized her old friends by visibly holding his hand.• Indeed, Puddephat had scandalized other dons by storming out after claiming the place-setting was a deliberateinsult.• In the 1800s, writerGeorgeSand, really a woman, scandalized society by dressing like a man.• Their vulgarity, loudness and lack of mannersscandalized their hosts.