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"chide" Definitions
  1. to criticize or blame somebody because they have done something wrong

163 Sentences With "chide"

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

Cummings appeared to obliquely chide Chaffetz for the proposed referral.
Young dads chide older Westside residents for being crotchety luddites.
Do they chide you for not using the "best" butter?
He went on to chide journalists for reporting on the document.
People love to chide Hollywood for making the movies it makes.
Still, critics chide minimalists for a kind of faux self-discipline.
Democrats may be tempted to chide their Republican counterparts for their profligacy.
Kennedy would chide himself afterward for not doing his homework on Khrushchev.
She was known to chide people for letting their dogs chase squirrels.
You also chide me for failing to deal adequately with criticisms of Smith.
And now, she called out to him, not to encourage but to chide.
I immediately chide myself: That is so cheap — I will not do it.
Some people reached out to educate the Kiwki, others still to chide him.
They gently chide him, in their own ways, for being who he is.
" Schumer took to Twitter to chide Harrison for his use of the word "complicated.
Yet, the same dopes who condemn Trump&aposs fire and fury now chide the opposite.
But under an Instant Runoff system, major candidates wouldn't need to chide dissident voters as much.
He used that role to chide world diplomats for failing to make disability rights a priority.
The backdrop: The chide by the highest-ranking Republican in Congress comes as three House Democrats — Reps.
Then he would chide the audience that this was not the proper way to run your business.
Mr. Lek, our genius of a trainer, would often chide fighters with talent for not doing so.
" Commenters were quick to chide the man, with one Facebook user writing, "I feel this is cruel.
Islamists and Palestinians chide signs of normalisation; those further away long for a release from past shackles.
In the Senate, Republicans, while quick to chide sanctuary cities, don't have an appetite to push the matter.
Conservative ideologues get airtime on state television, where they chide clerics for losing faith in velayat-e faqih.
When Conor is angry, he acts angrily in destructive ways — but the film doesn't chide him for it.
When John McCain and other Republicans berate and chide President Trump, they go after a man who won.
Later, he will chide Patrice, on whom he has a growing crush, for referring to policemen as pigs.
Some people chide today's players as being softer and unable to withstand the rigors of the NBA schedule.
The governor's chief counsel, Alphonso David, offered a response that, while noncommittal, nonetheless seemed to chide the city.
Pelosi also didn't hesitate to chide House Republicans' for their performance during the floor debate over Trump's impeachment.
If those who chide you include people who have biological children themselves, you might want to point this out.
Their record hitherto of bending to Mr Trump suggests they are unlikely to do much more than chide him.
Lindsey Graham went on "Fox and Friends" on Monday morning to chide Trump — and then reiterate his vile message.
Resist the urge to chide others or throw verbal zingers to get a laugh at someone else's expense.3.
She did, she said, chide Tusk for his remarks — though Tusk pushed back, sources said, suggesting that the "truth hurts".
To that end, Ho and Oldham chide Willett for his apparent apostasy from the one true method of constitutional interpretation.
But when the president went on to chide big banks and big oil, Democrats cheered while Republicans were largely silent.
You can quit at any time and it doesn't chide you for abandoning your quest or not burning enough calories.
But Trump refused to even chide Porter and Sorensen: Instead, he thanked Porter for his service and wished him well.
But when the choristers suddenly jump up from their seats and crowd to chide the old Geronte, it feels completely forced.
Ever the opportunist, Dan doesn't want to chide his new boss, he wants to participate in whatever scheme he is running.
President Trump addressed the website launch on Sunday, and appeared to chide Google by dropping a company statement onto the floor.
Basketball fans watched the NBA chide the Houston Rockets' GM for tweeting — then deleting — a single image supporting Hong Kong protestors.
Ms. Klobuchar said her willingness to directly chide opponents onstage is a sign of her ability to take on the president.
Ryan did chide Trump over the Muslim ban and his slander of Judge Gonzalo Curiel's integrity on the basis of his ethnicity.
Trump has regularly taken to social media to chide companies that choose to invest in other countries while selling goods within America.
Human rights activists can chide from the sidelines but, as Aleppo highlights, with no bite to their bark, they become self-parodies.
Changing channels ... One by one, they chide and jest, smirk and implore: This election is the most important one of our lifetime.
His team also seems less likely to chide the kingdom on human rights issues, a perennial thorn in the US-Saudi relationship.
International observers like the OSCE also regularly chide the US for state and local policies that functionally disenfranchise millions, especially marginalized groups.
Trump took to Twitter to chide Ms. Karlan for the comment, echoing a chorus of outrage from Mr. Trump's allies about it.
Trump went on to chide Walker for presenting him with "a plaque" to thank him, in part, because of previous campaign donations.
Few who chide illicit opioid manufacturers for overprescribing opioids recall that a century ago, heroin was among the pain medications they sold.
Most damaging are the many messages Mr Moro exchanged with Mr Dallagnol, in which he appeared both to coach and to chide him.
It's not the Fed, or regulators, or the industry's least-favorite senators who chide bankers and hedge fund execs from time to time.
Noting that Trump watches the Fox News Channel, Sanders took the opportunity to chide the president for his failure to release his returns.
People on the wrong side of history frequently chide human rights advocates as being "uncivil" for speaking out against grotesque forms of violence.
Wooing Latinos during his first presidential campaign, George W. Bush said that he opposed the "spirit" of Proposition 187, seeming to chide Mr Wilson.
To "Dress down" could mean to dress casually, but in today's puzzle it means to give someone a good talking to, or to CHIDE.
Richard Morrison, the chief music critic of The Times of London, used a column to chide "fascistic" activists for hounding oil and gas sponsors.
On President Trump's first trip back to the city, hundreds of residents took to the streets to chide, deride or applaud their hometown president.
The numbers will have doubtless gratified the limelight-loathing Mr Ortega, who is said in private to chide others to admire his company, not himself.
And like a fitness tracker, it would chide you for missing that benchmark, so you'll work to hang out with them more the next week.
Chinese generals and political leaders chide American counterparts that its alliances are a holdover from the cold war and an attempt to hold China down.
" He went on to chide the Republicans for promising to "solve challenges just by looking meaner and talking tougher or carpet bombing wherever we want.
British diplomats in the kingdom sometimes chide journalists for widening the gap between the reality of life in Saudi Arabia and the country's bloodthirsty image.
Orwell went on to chide liberals and pacifists for assuming that everything would turn out alright in the end, that evil would somehow destroy itself.
It will take a popular initiative to support him when he does the right thing and chide him when he gives in to the Eurosceptics.
Yet she says it is too early for her to chide the president: "In order to criticise someone, you have to do something yourself first."
"Man flu" is a term used to chide men who are suspected of exaggerating their symptoms when sick from a cold or other minor illness.
In fact, he says, he and his siblings jokingly chide their mother for watching them on Pakistani satellite channels at their home in Lancashire, England.
Even with government support, farming still carries such a stigma that teachers chide students that if they don't study hard, they'll end up growing cassava.
He goes on to chide congressional Republicans for "aiding and abetting (the president's) assault on the American Constitution" without deigning to cite a single example.
Raymond leaves a note instructing her to not leave her room, and arrives shortly after to chide her for not being boring enough with her murder.
Dating app executives took the opportunity to chide Facebook for its tattered history of data privacy practices and for allowing Russia to meddle in US elections.
While Priebus endorsed Vukmir as a central steward of Walker's agenda, he also went out of his way to chide Nicholson for previously being a Democrat.
Casting himself as an earnest, small-government ideologue in the mold of former Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona, Mr. Flake has continued to chide Mr. Trump.
Eliot Engel of New York even refers to Pompeo's aggressiveness on the Benghazi investigation when he was a congressman to chide him for acting slowly now.
He is all-knowing, amoral, obnoxious—here to mock, chide, explicate, stir up trouble, and get out while he can with his own however-gotten gains.
Her husband and other relatives chide her for making weekly trips to the local pharmacy to buy large piles of traditional herbs to treat her daily ailments.
"How would you feel if people refused to believe in you ," the newcomers chide the terrorized participants, who keep warning them not to go outside at night.
Readers responded vigorously on Facebook, some to applaud the law and others to chide the United States for not offering such benefits as a matter of course.
As easy as it is to chide Gladwell for being steeped in car culture, he routinely makes excellent points about how complicated this is all going to become.
She didn't chide me if I scrapped with some of the neighbor kids or challenged my ornery grandfather when I thought he was being a little too ornery.
But since then a string of indicators have rebounded from July's slump, leading some lawmakers to chide BoE Governor Mark Carney for being alarmist about the Brexit vote.
That philosophy would lead Ashe to chide a high-profile athlete like Michael Jordan for being silent on racism at the height of Jordan's popularity as a player.
I would call all the athletes "kids," and then grade their game tape like I was coaching them, and then chide them for taking selfies in the stands.
The president continues to chide Congress for failing to repeal and replace the ACA, a move that would drastically impair our nation's ability to curb the opioid crisis.
Your eyes may love the sight of the 22's, but the lack of sidewall means your butt, back and brain will chide you for being so superficial.
Mr. Sorenson, who is also gay, said his uncle used to chide him for being monogamous, which for the older couple did not preclude casual sex with others.
She had accepted our slave trading forebears as yet another facet of the complex legacy she carries, but she did chide me for naming her after a slave port.
The protections provided by the Fifth Amendment are not limited to citizens, the court insisted — before going on to chide the administration for its "shifting interpretations" of the order.
" Finally, they chide the president for his Thursday morning tweets, writing that "there is still time for him to do more to ameliorate the mess he has created here.
There is a double standard at play: audiences love her for her disaffected cool and her willingness to experiment, but they chide her when the experiments don't go well.
"We've seen him defend Kellyanne Conway's ethics violations because she was helping the family and seen him chide the Justice Department for not protecting him from criminal investigation," he said.
More than that, it is frustrating, deflating even, when they chide us for refusing to relent in the face of bigotry, even as they embrace a man like Donald Trump.
In June, Trump referred to the number of dead and wounded in a terror attack on London Bridge, and appeared to chide Khan for telling Londoners not to be alarmed.
When my friends from home visited, we'd crack shells out by the pool in my building and I'd chide them about how slow they and inept they were at it.
The German speaker of parliament, Martin Schulz, had to chide angry lawmakers and ask them to let Farage speak, accusing them of imitating tactics he said were normally used by UKIP.
Then I'll look up and infer from the characters' stricken faces I missed something crucial, so I'll rewind, and chide myself for laughing at said meme, which wasn't even that funny.
So instead of taking concrete, specific actions that impair Trump in specific ways, old-fashioned Republicans chide him on occasion and make speeches like the ones we heard at McCain's funeral.
Le Pen has gone so far as to chide Trump for what she sees as a reversal on NATO, a body that he criticized during his campaign but has now embraced.
Taylor, the former top U.S. envoy to Ukraine, left his post last month and took to the pages of the Washington Post to chide Pompeo for wondering whether Americans cared about Ukraine.
View two pages from the complete manuscript in Yale's Beinecke Library — Though their coteries cozily Venned, indifference — that an-aesthetic lodestone compelling Rrose Sélavy — led "her" to chide Stein for having taste.
He continued to chide the senator after his cancer diagnosis, frequently noting at rallies and speaking engagements that McCain voted "no" to kill a GOP effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act.
" He says that men are taught from a young age "to not empathize with girls and women," through small but impactful things—like "when we chide boys 'don't throw like a girl.
Ruby and Monse both chide Jamal for his expert catastrophism, and for the first time he responds to a unanimous, "Shut up, Jamal!" with a loud "STOP TELLING ME TO SHUT UP!"
In short, his biography is as juicy with incident, and as controversial, as that of any poet since Byron, and some film-goers will chide Larraín for not mentioning Neruda's unrepentant Stalinism.
Hindu nationalist thugs intimidate those who chide the government for straying from India's secular tradition, or who advocate a less repressive approach to protests in Kashmir, India's only state with a Muslim majority.
At the beginning of the film, Tony tries to discard two glasses used by Black plumbers, and his in-laws chide him for leaving his wife Delores (Linda Cardellini) alone with the workers.
Hillary Clinton went on to chide Trump for previously identifying as a Republican and said that his rise in the presidential polls should give hope to anyone dreaming of winning the White House.
He seemed to chide Benjamin for "rock[ing] the boat" with "what some perceive as an agenda that strives to make homosexuality open and accepted," per another email obtained by The Daily Beast.
Some may chide her, not without cause, for overreaching; yet the emotional impact of her deep-diving images — especially the astonishing clips from the "race films" of the 1940s and earlier — is profound.
Carnell "Golden Pipes" Johnson used a Drake meme on Instagram to chide Underwood, who was turned down by the Golden Knights to sing the national anthem before Game 3 of the Western Conference Final.
Indeed, hawks will see much to like in sections of the NSS that chide Russia for bullying its neighbours or meddling in democratic elections, a charge Mr Trump himself is oddly unwilling to level.
Instead, they've used them to chide people for allowing a good man to be called such nasty things, almost as evidence for how terrible the left is for making these things up about him.
A president who takes time to chide each factory closing would not only have little time for the other aspects of his job, but also risks reducing some of the beneficial aspects of creative destruction.
Political scientists have found data to support an idea that became a truism of the 2016 elections: Conservatives and Republicans have embraced so-called "identity politics" just as much as the liberals they chide for it.
But he failed to provide details on the latter, while he used his call for a payroll-tax cut to chide Democrats even though lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are sceptical of its usefulness.
In Tuesday's decision upholding Mr. Trump's travel ban, he seemed to chide the president for incivility even as he said the courts could do nothing to force him to behave with the decorum Justice Kennedy prized.
They seemed like a barrage, a way to chide me for leaving and the paper and pen equivalent of hands that held me too tightly, trying to pull me away from a life I yearned to create.
In a health center in Maiduguri, nurses chide the visiting mothers for feeding their children with dirty bottles, not breastfeeding properly, and failing to ensure they regularly eat the provided therapeutic food (RUTF) to stave off malnutrition.
Australians like to chide South Africans and Germans for their racist histories, when in fact both those countries have done so much more to face up to what has occurred on their soil than Australians have ever done.
The rhetoric is worrisome enough — even judges who agree with the Trump administration that the ban is constitutional have gone out of their way to chide the administration for being so hostile to a coequal branch of government.
Similarly, there's a powerful sequence at a dinner party, in which older men lambaste a 20-something who has the temerity to chide them for the slang terminology they use, reminding him of all that they overcame and survived.
But now that the embryos were all affixed and Rafael was not here to hypocritically chide her for the habit, she left the pack of cigs on the table as if one would not be enough for this conversation.
Several fashion designers have said publicly that they will not dress the first lady because they oppose her husband's policies — a fact that Gabbana appeared to chide in earlier Instagram posts he tagged #boycottdolce&gabbanaplease with laughing emojis. Mrs.
But while she has shown more willingness to chide her opponents more directly since her fourth-place finish in last week's New Hampshire primary, her message is still largely free of the direct attacks that her rivals have embraced.
The U.S. should not see a proposed European levy on internet giants as an attack against the country, French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire told CNBC on Saturday, while taking the opportunity to chide America on its trade war.
He has tried to place Trump's tweets off-limits (''I typically don't quote or comment on the tweet of the hour,'' he said in February), chide reporters for focusing on these trivial matters (''I'm going to do my job.
Even if the Supreme Court decides that the ban is illegal and/or unconstitutional, it still might chide the Ninth Circuit for putting it on hold everywhere, rather than just within the states governed by the Ninth Circuit itself.
When the police chide them at the beginning of the film about the damage they did while trying to protect a bank that was already protected by insurance, the heroes never acknowledge the argument, even to address its obvious flaws.
This last was put to bed earlier this week, when the retired Duke professor of psychiatry who actually crafted the DSM criteria for the disorder wrote to The New York Times to chide "amateur diagnosticians" for their errors of analysis.
It remains unclear whether there's more to the story here, but no matter what went down, it's highly unusual for a top White House staffer's spouse who was about to officially join the administration to chide the president on Twitter.
The robust condemnations Mr. Trump has received from media and political elites have only intensified the enthusiasm of his supporters, many of whom feel disdained and forgotten by the very same people who regularly mock and chide their man for his boorishness.
" And Trump suggested that the US shouldn't chide Erdogan's administration about potential violations of civil liberties because "when the world sees how bad the United States is and we start talking about civil liberties, I don't think we are a very good messenger.
They chide America for refusing to offer the sort of concessions that might conceivably induce the Kim regime to change course, such as a wholesale scaling-back of American military forces in the region and of exercises with South Korean and Japanese allies.
Burgess also does not like being the center of attention—he'd rather chide Watson about his love life or plan a cookout for the shop-goers than answer my questions—because he's genuinely curious to get to know other people and foster community.
As a Miami resident, I wonder if other cities lend themselves to a narrative that intersects sexuality, myth, and fears of a coming deluge, and I chide myself for romanticizing it, for seeking kernels of those themes in work by Miami artists.
In Warsaw, President Andrzej Duda of Poland used the occasion to chide other European leaders for not taking the threat posed by Russian aggression seriously, making an analogy to the policies of appeasement that allowed the Nazi party to rise in Germany.
The statement came after the prince - who is also defense minister of Iran's main regional rival - appeared to chide French President Emmanuel Macron this week for supporting the 2015 deal to lift most economic sanctions on Iran in exchange for curbs to Tehran's nuclear program.
" Her three daughters also used to say the darnedest things, she said, recalling a time when she had to chide her youngest, Erin, for refusing to eat her dinner: "Toward the end of the meal, she looked at her father and said, 'I love you.
The remarks represented a departure from Ms. Warren's previous unwillingness to publicly chide most of her top-tier primary opponents, and came as Mr. Buttigieg has overtaken Ms. Warren in some polls in Iowa, the first state to hold a nominating contest next year.
Jason D. Greenblatt, Mr. Trump's Middle East envoy, has taken to Twitter dozens of times to debate or chide Palestinian leaders, with whom the White House has had no formal contact since late 2017, when the president announced he would move the American Embassy to Jerusalem.
As a result, immediately after the bill passes, Senate Democrats will hold a news conference to chide Senate Republicans to "back up their rhetoric and support desperately needed emergency supplemental funding," according to a news release from Democratic leaders, even as they throw their support behind the bipartisan measure.
While his political opponents chide him for his authoritarian style and intolerance of dissent, Duterte enjoys a cult-like following and support from millions of Filipinos, who see him as the best hope for change in a country with rampant crime and a yawning gap between rich and poor.
It gave the show the best PR it could possibly ask for—former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, disgraced former Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore, and former Congressman Joe Walsh all angrily took to social media to chide the comedian for duping them into appearing on the show.
The Ultimate Excel Bootcamp Bundle: Lifetime Access — $280 See Details No one will chide you if your drawing "skills" begin and end with sketching stick figures, but if you want to further hone your creative talent, this bundle is meant to equip you with the skills to produce beautiful illustrations.
Issa is right to chide her for this; Molly is constantly finding herself disappointed by the men she's dated, and shutting down Andrew simply because she's always seen herself ending up with a black man seems foolish, especially since it seems like she might actually be interested in him otherwise.
But every time something like this happens, the reaction among certain pundits is identical to the reaction when, say, protesters interrupt Trump rallies and get punched: They take it as an opportunity to chide the strategy of the anti-Trump forces, as best said by NeverTrump Republican operative Tim Miller.
If it's fair to chide "Jackass the Movie" as an extended episode of the MTV show, then it's fair to point out that "Action Point," effectively a spinoff of that series, is a lazy summer romp in the "Meatballs" tradition with a handful of "Jackass"-style stunts as the scantiest of hooks.
"True social justice means a future where every child in every neighborhood can play outside without fear, can walk home safely from school and live out the beautiful dreams that build their heart," Trump said, a clear callout to conservatives who chide "social justice warriors" that have questioned police conduct in controversial incidents.
"Donald Trump Will Lie About This" read one sign, and, sure enough, White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer was sent out in the afternoon to falsely chide the press for reporting inaccurate numbers about the inauguration crowd, as reports came in from all over the country, and all over the world, of record-breaking protests.
She is visited first by a granddaughter, Zoe (Zosia Mamet), who arrives with a scowling paramour named Fantasy (Michael James Shaw) and a plea for money, and then by a parade of all the other selves that Nana could have been—young identical girls, with copper tresses, who chide her for missing out on forgiveness and love.
We chide the ancient Greeks for relying on enslaved labor and the Romans for their imperial wars, but our own story, as we imagine it, still starts with those ancient city-states and their precursors in the Mesopotamian Middle East (basically modern Iraq), when some clever primates first planted rows of seeds, built mud-brick walls, and scratched cuneiform on a crude tablet.
And so, as this game — once the Premier League's marquee game — descended into a glorious chaos, a contest defined not by either team's strengths but by their glaring flaws, a reminder that soccer, that sport, is essentially arbitrary and that the temptation to draw sweeping conclusions at all times is to be resisted, Arsenal's fans did not chide their team for their mistakes.
They note that Mr Ali himself seemed to chide Mr Trump for such demagoguery, issuing a statement rebuking unnamed "Presidential Candidates Proposing to Ban Muslim Immigration to the United States", shortly after the terrorist attacks late last year in Paris and San Bernardino, California (though a spokesman for Mr Ali has since said, not very convincingly, that the boxer was not seeking to criticise Mr Trump).
Brands have done such a good job at setting tight boundaries on our expectations and their own responsibilities that even when we chide fashion designers for not being size-inclusive on the runway, we gloss over the reason they're not: The vast majority of fashion brands make no size-inclusive clothing and don't see people with different bodies as worthy of being their customers.
Michael Avenatti, a Democratic activist and the attorney representing adult-film star Stormy Daniels in her suit against President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE, appeared to chide Democrats on Saturday while comparing their political efforts to those of Trump.
There's always got to be the memory of how he had failed to step up when Anita Hill was telling her harassment story, making him both the man who helped give us 25 years of Clarence Thomas on the Supreme Court, and a Judiciary Committee chairman who failed to chide fellow senators for suggesting that having to listen to your boss talk about breasts is no big deal.
Further, Moore's THR piece allows an anonymous source to chide the Crazy Rich Asians cast and cite Black Panther's press tour as an example of what the Crazy Rich Asians cast could have done, without fully explaining that even though many of Black Panther's actors and actresses wore red carpet looks inspired by (and invoking) African royalty and the movie's setting of Wakanda to the movie's LA premiere, many of those looks came from big-name designers like Versace, Calvin Klein, Viktor & Rolf, and Armani.
On the micro-level, McGrath aims to portray contemporary American life as it is, in all its giddy diversity and quotidian trashiness, and he is not unwilling to gently chide other poets for their tendency to ignore the existence of TV game shows, rock music and other phenomena some writers might write off as insufficiently poetic: In the world of some poetsthere are no Cheerios or Pop-Tarts, no hot dogstumbling purgatorially on greasy rollers,only chestnuts and pomegranates,the smell of freshly baked bread,summer vegetables in red wine, simmering.

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