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27 Sentences With "carped"

How to use carped in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "carped" and check conjugation/comparative form for "carped". Mastering all the usages of "carped" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Trump has carped about Sessions recusing himself from Justice Department's Russia probe.
" A critic in America's National Review carped: "Excellent use of the passive voice, Governor.
It was a serene afternoon, but people carped, anyway — about Woods's age (43 isn't old enough), about his currency (Hello?
Although some critics of the APT have carped that the theme of post-colonialism was overused, the works withstand this critique.
He had often carped about the public's interest in fossils, so much less informative—to him—than genetic studies of the living.
Philip played the straight man to Stan, carped about Paige and Matthew, and here and there registered his continuing disgruntlement with the job.
At a frosty joint press conference Mr Trump carped about German trade negotiators before sending the chancellor packing with a couple of petulant tweets about defence spending.
" She linked herself to Obama so firmly and so repeatedly that Sanders at one point carped: "I know you keep referring to Barack Obama all night here.
I carped at my two adolescent daughters for leaving their possessions strewn over the furniture and berated them for the evidence they left of themselves in the kitchen.
Infantilized and carped at by his mother in Ireland, he chose to return at the outbreak of the war to Paris, where he became involved with the French Resistance.
"This (the consultation) is a beginning," said Bharath Bhushan, founder of Center for Action Research and People's Development (CARPED) - one of the first organizations to study the medical malpractice in 2005.
When this ticktock of the Cuban missile crisis came out, some observers carped that the role of Kenneth O'Donnell — special assistant and appointments secretary to President John F. Kennedy — was inflated.
The first game of the second set was laden with drama, as world number 35 Collins carped with chair umpire Carlos Ramos over a malfunctioning net cord sensor while on serve.
"Henri Falcon decided to back the dictatorship," the hard-line opposition Popular Will party carped recently on Twitter, accusing him of cutting a deal to be Maduro's vice president in the next government.
The Seattle-based retailer has always cared more about customers than Wall Street, which meant it was willing to spend aggressively to get ahead of competitors and create new businesses even if investors carped.
"This has to be recognized as a cause of indebtedness and bonded labor," said Bharath Bhushan, founder of Centre for Action Research and People's Development (CARPED) - one of the first organizations to study the medical malpractice in 2005.
Historians, scientists and academic pedants carped about its audacity of scope — but the book, modeled after Jared Diamond's "Guns, Germs, and Steel" (a book that also received its share of carping and academic envy), presented a sweeping macrohistory, often marvelously.
Some have carped that for a book about life on her own, Ms Bolick seems to suffer no shortage of boyfriends (her publisher, keen to make clear that she is a "spinster" by choice, put a picture of the beautiful author on the cover).
And while the president has publicly carped at Speaker Paul D. Ryan and Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader — while also privately badmouthing them as unreliable and weak — he has maintained a partnership of mutual convenience with these frequent targets of the right's ire.
Twice in recent decades the minority party has staged out-of-session protests on the House floor: in 1995, when Democrats carped for a few hours after a budget vote, and in 2008, when Republicans occupied the chamber during the August recess and persuaded Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic speaker, to let an appropriations bill pass without extending a ban on drilling off America's coasts.
As for the cavilling crew who carped at her during her life Mrs. behn has answered them and she was thoroughly competent so to do.
The Ponikve airport, where most of 252nd Squadron aircraft were located was attacked by NATO for 35 times, with three carped bombings, destroying total airport infrastructure with almost 705 various bombs and missiles. A lot of Orao aircraft were destroyed.
In his book The Beatles Apart (1981), Woffinden wrote: "Those who carped at the lyrics, or at Harrison himself, missed a great deal of the music, much of which was exceptionally fine." Woffinden described the album as "a very good one", Harrison's "only mistake" being that he had waited so long before following up his successes over 1970–71.Woffinden, pp. 69, 71–72.
The student sued him in 1983, and Dailey settled by paying $100,000 and apologizing to her. Despite the off-court distractions, Dailey averaged 15.1 points per game in his first season with the Bulls and was chosen for that year's NBA All-Rookie Team. The following year was his most productive, when he averaged 18.2 points for the Bulls. In 1985, Dailey carped that rookie Michael Jordan received more attention from the team, arguing that he was "a player who likes to shine a little bit myself".
After a series of coincidences, Mantegna finished most of the work alone, though Ansuino, who collaborated with Mantegna in the Ovetari Chapel, brought his style from the Forlì school of painting. The now critical Squarcione carped about the earlier works of this series, illustrating the life of St James; he said the figures were like men made of stone, and should have been painted stone color. This series was almost entirely lost in the 1944 Allied bombings of Padua. The most dramatic work of the fresco cycle was the work set in the worm's-eye view perspective, St. James Led to His Execution.
' 'Ye'll gang to yon outer court, That stands a little below the toun; Ye'll find a stable snug and neat, Where stands my stately Wanton Brown.' He's down him to the outer court, That stood a little below the toun; There found a stable snug and neat, For stately stood the Wanton Brown. Then he has fixd a good strong cord Unto his grey mare's bridle-rein, And tied it unto that steed's tail, Syne shut the stable-door behin. Then he harped on, and he carped on, Till all were fast asleep; Then down thro bower and ha he's gone, Even on his hands and feet.
Sullivan's score generally came in for praise, though critics carped—as they would throughout his life—that theatrical scores were beneath his ability. In the Standard, A. E. T. Watson wrote: Arthur Sullivan in about 1871 Clement Scott in The Daily Telegraph found the opera "not marred by ambitious music". But he added, "Tuneful throughout, always pretty, frequently suggestive, the songs and dances are quite in character with the author's design.... Some of the numbers will certainly live, and the impression caused by the music as a whole is that it will have far more than a passing interest." Many critics praised the originality of the title character's song in the first act about the head of a railway company, which may have been a joke about the Duke of Sutherland, "who was fond of running railway engines".

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