Get Free Checker

haranguer

NOUN
  1. a public speaker who delivers a loud or forceful or angry speech

How To Use haranguer In A Sentence

  • It stretches the powers of even the most experienced muckrakers and soapbox haranguers to find the least routine and boring bits of nonsense to present to us as the news.
  • ‘These are the haranguers, the reminders, the people who will constantly do this stuff,’ he said.
  • Macaulay here speaks like a heated haranguer or Parliamentary partizan, not like an historian or a critic. The Celtic Magazine, Vol. 1, No. 1, November 1875 A Monthly Periodical Devoted to the Literature, History, Antiquities, Folk Lore, Traditions, and the Social and Material Interests of the Celt at Home and Abroad.
  • Picasso responds that he is not sure what such a picture would look like, at which point his haranguer takes a photo of his wife from his wallet and says, ‘‘There, you see, that is a picture of how she really is’.’
  • With the exception of the two or three at the front, no one has her hands free to grab the haranguer by the throat and close the oratorical stop-cock. The French Revolution - Volume 3
  • The priest as Prophet should not be an excuse to become a self-appointed haranguer for or against a personal agenda. Wounded Healer, Bearer of Mystery, Prophet
  • Yes, he's a well-compensated good soldier, but that hardly seems to hinder half of this league's haranguers, so give the man his props.
  • It isn't possible!" interrupted Don Ramon excitedly, in mingled horror of the masculinely rampant Mrs. Markham and admiration of the fascinatingly feminine Mrs. Brimmer; "a lady cannot be an orator -- a haranguer of men! The Crusade of the Excelsior
  • Half an hour was the time allotted for each haranguer; when this was expired, the moderators were seen to look at their watches. Domestic Manners of the Americans
  • And 'gan a-preaching with a frown -- he was a fierce haranguer. Ballads
View all