tirade|tirades in English
noun
[ti·rade || 'taɪreɪd /taɪ'reɪd]
denunciation, harangue, reproach, rebuke
Use "tirade|tirades" in a sentence
1. I apologize for the tirade.
2. Scant preferential Bennett hoorays tirades traduce Argufies conically! Sebastian nullify inorganically
3. I didn't ask for a tirade.
4. She launched into a tirade of abuse against politicians.
5. He launched an immoderate tirade on Turner.
6. He launched into a tirade against the church.
7. His writings are one long tirade against ignorance.
8. He too has met a tirade of abuse.
9. Slote was chewing on his cold pipe during the minister's tirade.
10. You might have spared yourself the trouble of delivering that tirade.
11. He launches into an inarticulate tirade against conventional people.
12. At least answer the Brigadier's tirade against temporary officers.
13. Respond to the content of your boss tirade, not the curses.
14. In a furious tirade of abuse, the opposition spokesperson demanded the minister's resignation.
15. Respond to the content of your boss's tirade, not the curses.
16. She launched into an angry/furious tirade about how she had been unfairly treated.
17. Sharpton claims that Tom threw a tirade after a loss to Tucson High.
18. Zyuganov denounced the election in a stinging 10-minute tirade broadcast nationally .
19. On one hand, he resented his courtroom tirades, which were often personal and designed to humiliate.
20. The minister loosed an angry tirade against the leader of the opposition.
21. She launched into a tirade against the policies that ruined her business.
22. At the end of his tirade he seemed curiously tired, and emptied of invective.
23. At the turn of a switch, an emotional tirade could become jocular chit-chat.
24. After the chairman delivered his opening speech , Mr. black launched into a brilliant tirade.
25. Alexander listened to my tirade and decided, instead, to be an adult and ignore the whole thing.