0 a show of disapproval etc, especially by the general public -- bantahan
There was a great outcry about the inadequate train service.
This provoked an outcry from the leading men of the kingdom.
This discovery led to an outcry among students and staff.
It was evidently this fear which, back in the 1860s, caused the orthodox outcry.
Few could have predicted the outcry that was to follow.
The depiction caused an outcry from all sectors of society and the planning committee was advised to change it.
Do "focusing" events lead "outcrying" voters to demand new forms of regulation by exposing failures or imperfections in the marketplace?
In contrast, self-command is identified with "manhood and firmness", while the "useless outcries" of men who fail to show this virtue are "womanish lamentations" (244).
Or consider what the nefarious concepts of public, public outcry, and public opinion mean in these accounts.