fulmination

NOUN
  1. the act of exploding with noise and violence
    his fulminations frightened the horses
  2. thunderous verbal attack
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How To Use fulmination In A Sentence

  • Bild, whose fulminations are closely followed in German political circles, explained: "Mamma mia, for Italians, inflation is a way of life, like tomato sauce with pasta! Italy's Draghi Aims to Ease German Doubt
  • What began as a Securities and Exchange Commission fulmination against an obscure bit of financial engineering—the reverse takeover—has grown into a spate of delistings, shareholder lawsuits and regulatory investigations amid auditor resignations, charges of accounting irregularities, and a short-selling frenzy. China's Year of the Question Mark
  • I also wonder how many of these over-the-top fulminations (is that redundant?) were in response to the “we want the Obama Administration to fail” meme. The Volokh Conspiracy » Results of VC Reader Poll
  • Conradin being prefTed by Henry to haffcen his march Arrives into Italy, in the month of October arrived at Verona, wt/ian with ten thoufand horfe, in contempt of the monitories arm y m and fulminations of the pope. The modern part of an universal history from the earliest accounts to the present time;
  • The journalist, who had been asked to comment on differences between the two Koreas, triggered the fulmination by replying that South Koreans are allowed to criticize their leader.
  • It would thus be a mistake to regard the rumblings from the right as solely a partisan matter, just as it would be a mistake to regard the fulminations of the counterrevisionists as solely an academic matter.
  • The object of the present invention is to realize a system apt to eliminate almost entirely both this type of risk of fulminations and also the risk of short circuits.
  • Notwithstanding all the passionate fulminations of the spokesmen of governments, the inevitable consequences of inflationism and expansionism as depicted by the ‘orthodox’ economists are coming to pass.
  • Reade's fulmination recounts the Tom Hicks‑George Gillett years, which ended in court in October, shortly after Liverpool lost to Blackpool and half the Kop stayed behind to demand the removal of the Tom and Jerry of Premier League ownership. Kenny Dalglish is showing at Liverpool he was never a busted flush | Paul Hayward
  • Led by Michelle Malkin, the Orcosphere has made the leap into the hyperspace of right-wing fulmination. Look What They Found
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