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Перевод: harangue
[существительное] речь ; обращение; публичная речь; горячее обращение; разглагольствование; [глагол] произносить речь; разглагольствовать
Тезаурус:
- Wreathed in trails of cigarette smoke, I had a burning desire to leap upon a chair and harangue the multitude.
- "Don't you harangue me, you grubby heathen," said Gurder.
- A fanzine editor, noting Morrissey's attendance, ploughed through the startled dancers and began to harangue our hero.
- "I TOLD you so" is the least edifying of attitudes between friends, but I did harangue the House of Commons for 55 minutes on 19 December on the ecological consequences of what was then known as the "military option".
- The play is enlivened by the vicious energy of the performances and by a variety of Irish music and dance which ranges from mournful ballads to the jolliest of jigs, transforming what could have been a dreary harangue into an invigorating ensemble work.
- "The Duke of Buckingham then stood to deliver an harangue," Edward went on.
- The fisherman's wife, however, chastised him for this simple request and returned to the shore, there to harangue the Golden Fish with her demands for jewels, wealth and status.
- But soon he discovered that politicians were more interesting than colonels so he arranged his soldiers as though they were the House of Commons and made them harangue each other.
- The faint waft of the regiment of unwashed drifted down the carriage as he carried on his harangue, vouchsafing the information that his wife had divorced him, not the other way round.
- He can make suggestions and harangue in the man's council meeting, but he cannot order people into action.
- Waved back by a Kalashnikov-wielding, spotty boy-soldier, I was subject to a ten-minute harangue by two bad-tempered border guards.
- He reportedly would sit for hours in a depressive silence, to be broken by a harangue on his pet hates, which included sherry drinkers and those by the name of Hambly.
- For around 400 the lucky purchaser can harangue members of his family with sermons from the hexagonal pine pulpit or, for 65 - 80, sit in his favourite armchair beneath a carved and painted royal crest used in the courtroom scenes from Rumpole of the Bailey.
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