harangue 的 3 个定义
- a scolding or a long or intense verbal attack; diatribe.
- a long, passionate, and vehement speech, especially one delivered before a public gathering.
- any long, pompous speech or writing of a tediously hortatory or didactic nature; sermonizing lecture or discourse.
ha·rangued, ha·rangu·ing.
- to address in a harangue.
ha·rangued, ha·rangu·ing.
- to deliver a harangue.
harangue 近义词
long lecture
give a long lecture
更多harangue例句
- Just a few seconds on the receiving end of a harangue from such a fellow, whether at a surf break or the crag or the skin track, is enough to ruin an otherwise lovely day.
- Watch him unleash a magnificent, expletive-ridden rant—and be grateful for the Internet, where this harangue will live forever.
- He used to harangue any of the young men in Homs not participating in protests, recalled Moutlak.
- The occasion was a gala dinner during which Pinter began to harangue some unfortunate guest for his political views.
- I half-expected him to barnstorm out in riding boots and harangue us, Mussolini-style, underlit from a plinth.
- The last thing an incoming administration needs is to stage a long diplomatic harangue about nothing, inside an echo chamber.
- Il avoit sa belle robe soubs soy (car c'estoit en est), et se preparoit sa harangue funebre.
- La harangue devoit finir en l'adieu et comploration commune de tous.
- Voyez l'efficace du sacrement: le lendemain matin, il mande M. de Biancourt et moy, et de nouveau il recommence sa harangue.
- There now is Sullivan, in a long harangue, following you in a determined opposition to our petition to the King.
- In defiance of all decency, he went to Westminster Hall, demanded a hearing, and pronounced a harangue against standing armies.