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120 Sentences With "excoriates"

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

He excoriates Manafort for "repeatedly and knowingly" breaking the law.
Notorious for his misogyny, Mr Duterte excoriates female critics with particular savagery.
In one scene, Robert excoriates Jackson (Jeffrey Kuhn) for wanting phalloplasty surgery.
His protagonist, a madman, excoriates the audience for their failures, moral and otherwise.
Koretz excoriates the reform movement for its indifference to the harm it caused.
Donald J. Trump often excoriates the news media, calling reporters dishonest or disgusting.
Many of the legal and regulatory changes that Brill excoriates have counterintuitive beginnings.
It excoriates the industry for its low productivity, unreliable delivery and fragmentation through subcontracting.
In the process, he excoriates what he calls a Brexit betrayal by mendacious elites.
The Declaration of Independence excoriates the "absolute Tyranny over these States," exercised by King George III.
One message from a Hillary Clinton supporter excoriates the committee for its supposed endorsement of Bernie Sanders.
He excoriates the United States while warmly embracing China, which is now Cambodia's largest investor and trading partner.
BUENOS AIRES — The Argentine stand-up comic Malena Pichot has a bit where she excoriates those who oppose legalizing abortion.
Education International, which represents the N.E.A. and other teachers unions around the world, similarly excoriates Bridge and the Liberian government.
Former FBI Director James Comey excoriates President Donald Trump in the first excerpts released from his new book, A Higher Loyalty.
Mujica excoriates Trump as a shameful leader of a world superpower, but says Venezuelans are paying for Maduro&aposs failed leadership.
The record dropped earlier this week, on Indigenous People's Day, and lyrically excoriates the ruling classes, colonial destruction, and Christian hypocrisy.
It is the clearest sign yet that he knows how to capitalize on victimhood in ways those he excoriates never could.
He mentions "Empire" and various cartoons including "The Flintstones," and excoriates producers he accuses of "forcing" young kids to become gay.
The applause continues when Trump excoriates Clinton and President Obama for increased environmental regulation of the coal, oil and gas industries.
She excoriates a culture in which "a body is a matter of public record," the subject of commentary by anyone and everyone.
Another person whose views Mr Harris excoriates is Tariq Ramadan, a Muslim thinker who combines leftist political ideas with fairly traditional religious ones.
He also excoriates TechCrunch and Business Insider, both of which covered early reports of the incidents, by calling them "gossip blogs" publishing clickbait.
" The ad excoriates the Republican incumbent but also bipartisan trade deals and unnamed political leaders who push "issues that don't impact your life.
He excoriates the judiciary, independent law enforcement and the free press — which he has called "the enemy of the people," a Stalinist phrase.
On Wednesday, Francis unleashed another aspect of his complex public persona: The disappointed prophet who excoriates world powers for mistreating the poor and marginalized.
He excoriates arcane and time consuming tax laws, prohibitive environmental regulations, and any scenario where political connections seem to outweigh personal talent or business competitiveness.
Donald J. Trump denounces recent trade deals, opposes cuts in government benefit programs, calls his Democratic opponent "pro-war," and excoriates Muslims and Mexican immigrants.
Could he live with a deal that merely puts off the problem, like the Iran nuclear agreement brokered by his predecessor that he routinely excoriates?
The email excoriates the president for the declaration and gives recipients the option of donating anywhere from $10 to $85033, or an amount of their choosing.
The student, who lives in Southwest Cornwall (of course he's British), excoriates fellow Commonwealth product Bieber for setting bad grammatical examples for the rest of the world.
Frankly, it's mystifying that Trump continues to defend Russia and Putin, even as he excoriates everyone else, from C.I.A. officials to a local union leader in Indiana.
As Mary's ambitions become more apparent, John Knox (David Tennant), a powerful Protestant preacher, excoriates her from the pulpit in language that links her power with sexual wantonness.
The candidate has some expertise in the field having written a book titled "Solutions" which excoriates the government for failing to secure a better deal for Senegalese resources.
Charged with hypocrisy for receiving money from a source he excoriates, he responds that the money was made by the labor of his ancestors, not by a white exploiter.
He criticises the appeal of political correctness, questions the ability of markets to survive without state intervention and excoriates what he sees as the ulterior motives behind fair-trade coffee.
Some scenes proved less effective — sketches featuring Joan of Arc and Marie-Antoinette didn't feel as urgent — but "Jusque dans vos bras" is razor-sharp when it excoriates everyday bigotry.
ELAINE EDELMANEAST BRUNSWICK, N.J. To the Editor: Joan C. Williams excoriates progressive "elites" for joking about "plumber's butt" and correlates that with the dearth of qualified plumbers and trades people.
Despite his behind-the-scenes interactions with reporters, Trump frequently, and sometime viciously, excoriates mainstream journalists for their lack of focus on topics favorable to the president and his agenda.
I asked Remender if he had any qualms about making a show that excoriates Reagan so soon after the deaths and subsequent lionizing of Republican lawmakers John McCain and George H.W. Bush.
The latest criticisms of McCain briefly turned Wednesday's official White House event into a de facto campaign rally, events in which the president regularly excoriates his critics and rehashes his administration's accomplishments.
" The language tends to be oppositional rather than consensus-seeking: Where Biden's climate policy looks forward to a clean-energy future, Sanders excoriates the fossil fuel industry for "endangering the future of humanity.
Trump argues that the government should do more to insure that workers have good jobs, speaks very little about religious imperatives, and excoriates the war in Iraq and wars of occupation in general.
Arguably the central villain of the film is John Brennan, now a regular talking head on MSNBC, where he excoriates the Trump administration for its complicity in all kinds of corruption and criminality.
Kevin Garnett, playing himself, later explains to Howard how the whole industry is built on exploitation, as he excoriates Sandler's character for trying to profit from the labor and suffering of people far away.
But he then excoriates the real estate mogul over his rhetoric about Hispanics, including Trump's assertion that an American-born federal judge of Mexican descent won't be impartial in a lawsuit against Trump University.
He excoriates cowboy drone handlers "Dick" and "George" (Cheney and Bush) who see "baby terrorists glaring from behind makeshift Babybjörns"; he scorns today's San Francisco as "a dandified eunuch" whose "memories have been cordoned off".
The punters weren't really moving, but it's easy to imagine that they could have, particularly as Anohni suddenly became animated during "Obama"—which excoriates the current administration for its failure to follow through on promises.
DF: One example of the way that he in public excoriates the media and in private craves their approval was, remember four health care bills ago, when the House pulled its health care bill dramatically?
Alarming some politicians, Jair Bolsonaro, an ultranationalist congressman who excoriates immigrants and defends the torture of drug traffickers, is polling well ahead of traditional contenders like Aécio Neves, a senator from the Brazilian Social Democracy Party.
It's a twist that further complicates the show's already complicated racial politics, in which the local black population excoriates the "immigrant scum" of the local Italian population, who serve up beatings and Molotov cocktails in response.
But he excoriates a bureaucracy that is not the cause of the failings he identifies, and in the process reinforces existing prejudices about a bloated and protected international civil service, injuring the organization he says he loves.
Mauro Paulino, the director of Datafolha, one of Brazil's top polling companies, noted the fastest-rising candidate in opinion surveys this year is Jair Bolsonaro, a right-wing nationalist who expresses abhorrence for homosexuality and excoriates immigrants.
The competing strategies — Mr. Sanders targeting Mr. Biden while Mr. Biden wraps himself in the Obama legacy and excoriates Mr. Trump — illustrate the starkly different wagers the two candidates are making in the outset of the 2020 contest.
The filing then excoriates the University of Michigan&aposs "overbroad, vague, and subjective" bias response policy -- which comes complete with a fast-acting "Bias Response Team" (BRT) -- that the DOJ paints as an Orwellian betrayal of First Amendment principles.
The event will not silence those who accuse the Trump administration of hypocrisy in matters of religion: because, for example, it often excoriates the Shia rulers of Iran while giving a free-ish pass to its own Sunni Muslim friends.
Ms Temelkuran, at times playful, but more often polemical, surveys the wasteland of the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, when Turkey suffered three military coups, and she excoriates the current administration for dragging the country back to the brink of collapse.
Currently the sole challenger to former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton for the Democratic nomination, Sanders — a self-described socialist — frequently excoriates big business and income inequality, and endorses a plan that combines lavish social spending with large tax hikes.
She excoriates Christianity's "exaggerated anxiety about death" and, following Nietzsche, complains about the link between the fear of death and "slave morality": Never will I forget the impression that some plaster casts of bodies excavated in Pompeii made on me.
"Read more: 'Problematic is an understatement': Mueller excoriates Trump for praising WikiLeaks during the 2016 electionIndeed, when Mueller gave his first public statement on the Russia investigation in May, he said he would not testify before Congress because "the report is my testimony.
Among the audience receiving Trump at the New York Times was its CEO, Mark Thompson, the former director general of the BBC, whose book, "Enough Said: What's Gone Wrong With the Language of Politics?" excoriates just the kind of rhetoric Trump deployed.
"None of the funds appropriated by this Act may be made available for assistance for the central Government of the Russian Federation," reads the section, which excoriates Russia for seeking to destabilize Ukraine, annexing Crimea and occupying Georgian territories like Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
In her opening statement to impeachment investigators, former National Security Council official Fiona Hill excoriates Republicans for indulging in unsubstantiated conspiracy theories about Ukrainian interference in the 2016 presidential election — the same ones President Donald Trump tried to leverage the Ukrainian government into investigating.
Her most recent film, "Blood on the Mountain," may be exactly what Mr. Cogan, Ms. Jackson and others have in mind: a history of West Virginia coal mining that excoriates the coal industry, ennobles the coal miner and is told by someone from that culture.
He excoriates the rise of the present ruling party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and its prime minister, Narendra Modi, charting the way they have exploited both anti-Muslim passions and the wounded pride inflicted by British rule, riding to power on a wave of religious bigotry.
Joni ErnstJoni Kay ErnstDemocrats spend big to put Senate in play Houston police chief excoriates McConnell, Cornyn and Cruz on gun violence GOP senators unveil bill to expand 'opportunity zone' reporting requirements MORE (R) for her seat on Thursday released a new campaign ad showing Ernst shooting at the challenger with a handgun.
This is the part where you expect my setup about that argument about journalism on the internet to dovetail with the image of a Google News search above, with a clever meta-joke about this very post participating in this dynamic — followed by an exegesis that alternately excoriates and praises meme culture and its effect on journalism.
Hillary Clinton's team went on the offensive against Donald Trump on Thursday, releasing a new attack ad that excoriates the real estate mogul for bilking a small architecture firm: As it released the video, Clinton's team also unveiled a set of new policy proposals designed to prevent big firms from using "predatory behavior" to exploit smaller businesses.
Joni ErnstJoni Kay ErnstDemocrats spend big to put Senate in play Houston police chief excoriates McConnell, Cornyn and Cruz on gun violence GOP senators unveil bill to expand 'opportunity zone' reporting requirements MORE (R-Iowa), who is introducing her own version of the legislation, objected, arguing that the House bill would not pass in the upper chamber.
Read more:11 of the biggest moments from more than 5 hours of Mueller's blockbuster congressional hearingsMueller warns that Russia is already meddling in the 2020 election and other countries may try it'The death rattle for impeachment': Republicans take a victory lap after Mueller's testimony misses Democrats' expectations'Problematic is an understatement': Mueller excoriates Trump for praising WikiLeaks during the 2016 election
If you go to Metacritic and browse through just a handful of early 2017 releases that have low ratings but killer critical acclaim, you'll find shows as wide-ranging as The Leftovers, Catastrophe, Samurai Jack, The Americans, and American Crime (a hauntingly shot series that excoriates America's history of both class- and race-based oppression and airs on ABC, one of the original big three TV networks).
More: Paul's diagnosis sends shockwaves   More from the Senate: Some Democrats growing antsy as Senate talks drag on Grants for airlines on the table, despite criticism of bailouts McConnell excoriates Democrats over stimulus demands Romney urges against Mormon families gathering at airport to pick up missionaries Klobuchar says her husband tested positive for coronavirus   SPONSORED CONTENT - PCMA Pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) are committed to making sure that the patients we serve can access needed medications safely.
Va.), Todd YoungTodd Christopher YoungGOP senators unveil bill to expand 'opportunity zone' reporting requirements Statesmen seek bipartisan solutions to big challenges The Hill's 12:30 Report: Trump says he is fighting testimony to protect presidency MORE (R-Ind.), Joni ErnstJoni Kay ErnstDemocrats spend big to put Senate in play Houston police chief excoriates McConnell, Cornyn and Cruz on gun violence GOP senators unveil bill to expand 'opportunity zone' reporting requirements MORE (R-Iowa), Bill CassidyWilliam (Bill) Morgan CassidyThis bipartisan plan is the most progressive approach to paid parental leave Obstacles remain for deal on surprise medical bills Key House and Senate health leaders reach deal to stop surprise medical bills MORE (R-La.) and Cory GardnerCory Scott GardnerDemocrats spend big to put Senate in play Republicans consider skipping witnesses in Trump impeachment trial Group of veterans call on lawmakers to support impeachment, 'put country over politics' MORE (R-Colo.).
Susan CollinsSusan Margaret CollinsDemocrats spend big to put Senate in play Senate confirms Trump's 50th circuit judge, despite 'not qualified' rating Republicans consider skipping witnesses in Trump impeachment trial MORE (Maine), John CornynJohn CornynLive coverage: DOJ inspector general testifies on Capitol Hill Hillicon Valley: Apple, Facebook defend encryption during Senate grilling | Tech legal shield makes it into trade deal | Impeachment controversy over phone records heats up | TikTok chief cancels Capitol Hill meetings Apple, Facebook defend encryption during Senate grilling MORE (Texas), Joni ErnstJoni Kay ErnstDemocrats spend big to put Senate in play Houston police chief excoriates McConnell, Cornyn and Cruz on gun violence GOP senators unveil bill to expand 'opportunity zone' reporting requirements MORE (Iowa), Cory GardnerCory Scott GardnerDemocrats spend big to put Senate in play Republicans consider skipping witnesses in Trump impeachment trial Group of veterans call on lawmakers to support impeachment, 'put country over politics' MORE (Colo.) and Thom TillisThomas (Thom) Roland TillisDemocrats spend big to put Senate in play Group of veterans call on lawmakers to support impeachment, 'put country over politics' The real US patent 'crisis' MORE (N.
He excoriates Akaky for not going through the proper government channels to get an interview. He is of no help. Physician: Doctor called after Akaky develops a throat infection. He tells Akaky's landlady to order a coffin.
In another popular video, a Harrisburg School District board member excoriates a critic for making personal attacks on the District Superintendent. In 2008, The Philadelphia Inquirer used Roxbury's footage from the 2006 "Bonusgate" trials in its coverage of the event.
Andrew Unterberger of Spin opined that the song "starts off a letdown, but quickly proves to be ['Ship to Wreck's] roaring equal, with the unexpected arrival of a thick guitar chop and regal horn salute that gives Florence the instrumental support she deserves as she excoriates an uncommitted significant other".
For example, from a 1995 article in The Daily Telegraph: The phrase also appears in the 1996 novel Fight Club, and the 1999 film based on it, in which the character Tyler Durden excoriates his disciples: "You're the all singing, all dancing crap of the world." A 1998 episode of The Simpsons was titled "All Singing, All Dancing".
Marriage and family are given primacy in the play, as the title suggests. Ngugi has a more traditional view of marriage than other late 20th century writers. The focus is on the home and on a solid marriage rooted in companionship and the ability to care for one another. He excoriates the Western conception of marriage, which Njooki characterizes as property marrying property.
Gerald consents, after which he, the Geniuses and Kyle's friends go to the studio where Dr. Phil is produced. Jobs, complying with Gerald's new deal, reluctantly makes preparations to have Kyle separated from his two fellow victims. This enrages Cartman, whose dream is now being quashed. Cartman looks up to the heavens and angrily excoriates God, after which he is struck by a bolt of lightning.
He manages to get a partial confession from her, but she traps him by pinning his arm inside of his car window and sending it into traffic. In a haze, she locates Sarah at Elizabeth Arden and makes an impassioned plea for her help. Sarah tells Terry she would rather let Jack be killed than risk losing face. A disgusted Terry excoriates her and leaves.
Ibn Isfandiyar excoriates this book as "a work wherein the author sought rather to display his mastery over the Arabic language than to impart information to the reader". Yazdadi includes anecdota up to the time of "Qabus Shamsu'l-Ma'ali (A. D. 976—1012)": Browne p. 36. Ibn Isfandiyar translated this work into Persian, and this, coupled with genealogical and historical information on the Bavandids, formed the core of his history.
The Legislature met for a special session at the State Capitol in Albany on June 22, 1925;BATTLE OVER PARKS WILL BEGIN TONIGHT AT SPECIAL SESSION in NYT on June 22, 1925 (subscription required) and adjourned on June 26.SMITH EXCORIATES WESTCHESTER GROUP FOR PARK DESERTION in NYT on June 26, 1925 (subscription required) This session was called by Gov. Al Smith to reconsider the state park legislation passed during the regular session.
Overwhelmed by the fear of being alone, the young woman shows that she has a great and morbid need for EVA, even more than her colleague Shinji has. In a scene from the twenty-fifth episode she excoriates the machine as a "worthless piece of junk", but then immediately goes on to admit that "I'm the junk". Asuka's relationship with Rei Ayanami is equally tormented. She despises Rei by calling her and "mechanical puppet girl".
This is much to the dismay of Miss Sophie, who spies on them through her window and spreads malicious gossip about them. She later humiliates Lorraine at a tenants' meeting held by Melanie, only to be embarrassed by Ben, who comes to Lorraine's defense. Lorraine is consoled by Ben and the two become friends. A furious Melanie excoriates Miss Sophie for her treatment of Lorraine and orders her out of her apartment.
In 1927 he wrote: > Existence, besides being a miracle, is a symbol. Albeit here for inscrutable > purposes the spirit is only to be discerned as it were in a distorting- > glass. (The Book of God's Madness) Chubb sought to persuade his readers in An Appendix of the verity of his solipsism by illustrating some examples of serendipitous events from his life. His aim is more on the mark when he excoriates the taboos and frustrations of modern life.
He also criticizes the relative lack of attention given to the motivations of Union soldiers fighting in the war. He excoriates the film for allegedly implying, in agreement with Lost Cause mythology, that the South was more "sincerely Christian." Woodworth concludes that the film, through "judicial omission," presents "a distorted view of the Civil War." Historian William B. Feis similarly criticized the director's decision "to champion the more simplistic-and sanitized- interpretations found in post-war "Lost Cause" mythology".
Tagore wrote eight novels and four novellas, among them Chaturanga, Shesher Kobita, Char Odhay, and Noukadubi. Ghare Baire (The Home and the World)—through the lens of the idealistic zamindar protagonist Nikhil—excoriates rising Indian nationalism, terrorism, and religious zeal in the Swadeshi movement; a frank expression of Tagore's conflicted sentiments, it emerged from a 1914 bout of depression. The novel ends in Hindu-Muslim violence and Nikhil's—likely mortal—wounding. Gora raises controversial questions regarding the Indian identity.
The Fall's music at the time was described as "Mancabilly", and by Smith himself as "Country 'n' Northern".Spicer, Al (1999) Rock: 100 Essential CDs, Rough Guides, , pp. 65-6 The album opens with "Pay Your Rates", the lyric described as one that "excoriates small-minded conformity". Second track "English Scheme" was seen as Smith "sneering at the middle class liberals".Brackett, Nathan & Hoard, Christian (eds.) (2004) The New Rolling Stone Album Guide, Simon & Schuster Ltd.
During cheerleading practice at South Park Elementary School, the cheerleaders realize that Lisa Berger, an insecure girl, lacks enthusiasm in her cheers. When the team captain, Wendy, learns Lisa has a crush on Butters, she suggests asking him on a date to help boost her confidence. When Lisa does this at lunch, Butters turns her down. When Wendy excoriates Butters for this, Butters explains that he likes women who are gorgeous like his crush Kim Kardashian.
However, she tries to gather information to restore the mark through the Order of the Emerald Claw and the religion known as the Blood of Vol. The worst punishment for a member of a dragonmarked house is called excoriation. It is similar to excommunication in that the other members of the house are not allowed to have any contact with the excoriate under threat of severe punishment themselves. Excoriates may not even avail themselves of the publicly available services their house provides.
He also criticized the relative lack of attention given to the motivations of Union soldiers fighting in the war. He excoriates the film for allegedly implying, in agreement with Lost Cause mythology, that the South was more "sincerely Christian". Woodworth concluded that the film through "judicial omission" presents "a distorted view of the Civil War". The historian William B. Feis similarly criticized the director's decision "to champion the more simplistic- and sanitized-interpretations found in post-war "Lost Cause" mythology".
Aurelius Conanus or Aurelius Caninus was a Brittonic king in 6th-century sub- Roman Britain. The only certain historical record of him is in the writings of his contemporary Gildas, who excoriates him as a tyrant. However, he may be identified with one of the several similarly named figures active in Britain during this period. In the 12th century Geoffrey of Monmouth adapted Gildas' account for his chronicle Historia Regum Britanniae, and thereafter Aurelius Conanus was remembered as a legendary King of Britain.
When the MPAA gave the film an "R" rating, Scott blasted the decision and urged exhibitors to defy it by running the movie unrated. Scott strongly disagreed with the MPAA's position that incest was a "major" theme of the film and said he was "appalled" that his movie was given the same rating as films like Candy Stripe Nurses and The Texas Chain Saw Massacre.McBride, Joseph (October 9, 1974). "Geo. C. Scott Excoriates MPAA R On His 'Savage Is Loose'; Tells Exhibs To Ignore Rating". Variety. 5.
Michael takes his college class on a field trip to the site of the standoff in which his wife was killed, and passionately excoriates the FBI for failing to sufficiently investigate the besieged family, and for provoking the standoff. Michael's students appear uneasy. Oliver tells Michael that Grant wishes someone could be punished for his mother's death, which again rouses Michael's suspicion. He discovers in archives that Oliver's real name is William Fenimore, and that he tried to blow up a post office in Kansas at age 16.
Nichole tells him that Token's race is coincidental before going to her room. She subsequently finds a teddy bear placed on her bed by Cartman, thinking that it is from Token, and after seeing that its dog tag reads "'Cuz Blacks Belong Together", she breaks up with him. Cartman, heartbroken that his match has failed, excoriates Cupid Me, and beats him bloody with a baseball bat. Cartman eventually has a change of heart, and rejuvenates Cupid Me with his pleas, telling him that they still have work to do.
Gildas's work is important for reasons beyond the historical information he provides. At the time when Gildas was writing there was a Christian church in Britain. Gildas uses Latin to address the rulers he excoriates and regards Britons, at least to some degree, as Roman citizens, despite the collapse of central imperial authority. By 597, when St Augustine arrived in Kent, England, or at least most of it, was populated by adherents of Anglo-Saxon paganism, and the new rulers did not think of themselves as Roman citizens.
When Butters finds the staff to be unsympathetic, he excoriates them, telling them that he is sick of people telling him he is confused, and that he was never confused until he was brought to the camp. He also voices his belief that the staff's assertions of "confusion" are simply a projection of their own confusion. Somewhat encouraged by this expression of confidence and pride, Bradley decides not to commit suicide and comes down. Seeing that Butters is happy being bi-curious, Stephen admits that he is bi-curious as well and that he enjoys his curiosity.
After fourth grader Eric Cartman boasts to his classmates of owning an iPad, and mocks them for not having one, he is humiliated when it is revealed that he actually does not own one. When he and his mother Liane go to Best Buy to buy an iPad, the item's exorbitant price prompts her to suggest buying a less expensive Toshiba HandiBook. The demanding Cartman, who had his mind set on the iPad as a status symbol, loudly excoriates her in the middle of the store, accusing her of "fucking" him. The embarrassed Liane decides to leave the store without buying Eric anything.
Toby bribes all three, and as a result, Begbick dismisses the case. Next Jimmy's case is called. Chained, he is led in by Billy, from whom he tries to borrow money; Billy of course refuses, despite Jim's plea to remember their time together in Alaska. In virtually the same speech he used to attack Higgins, Moses excoriates him for not paying his bills, for seducing Jenny (who presents herself as a plaintiff) to commit a "carnal act" with him for money, and for inciting the crowd with "an illegal joyous song" on the night of the typhoon.
The mental patients rail against both of them and eventually overwhelm the orderly assigned to keep the patients under control, injuring Mr. Norton in the process. The narrator hurries Mr. Norton away from the chaotic scene and back to campus. Dr. Bledsoe, the college president, excoriates the narrator for showing Mr. Norton the underside of black life beyond the campus and expels him. However, Bledsoe gives several sealed letters of recommendation to the narrator, to be delivered to friends of the college in order to assist him in finding a job so that he may eventually re-enroll.
With the use of a "flippant tone and [an] uncomfortable use of sarcasm," White Dog is Gary's dissection of the paranoia generated by both racism and classism as he juxtaposes McCarthyism-American, in which there is an "obsessive sniffing out of 'subversives' and violent race riots," against the barricades and race riots of France in 1968. The violence depicted also provides a discourse on revolutionary social change, as it also leads to "a new order, a new reality." Gary "excoriates American racism, black activism, and movie-colony liberalism" and reflects on American race relations as a whole. He also documents his own "intolerance of intolerance that is the curse of tolerance".
" Dexter and Jimenez's confrontation was named Hall's best scene by Variety critic Stuart Levine. In a short recap of seasons 1 and 2 in Film Quarterly, J. M. TyreeJones Lecturer in Fiction at Stanford University's Creative Writing program. called "The Dark Defender" season 2's "most intriguing episode", and compared Dexter to Batman: > When the identities of the Butcher's victims are revealed to be murderers, > the public applauds him, elevating Dexter to the status of a folktale > avenger or comic-book anti-hero. And indeed Rita excoriates him for > disappearing at night "like Clark fucking Kent," but the FBI describes the > Butcher as more like one's own "personal Batman.
Clyde Donovan unintentionally leaves the toilet seat up, causing his mother, Betsy, to punish him in front of Stan Marsh, Kyle Broflovski, Eric Cartman and Kenny McCormick after she falls in. This embarrasses Clyde, who asks the boys not to say anything about it at school. Cartman nonetheless tells the entire class the next day, while Butters Stotch is dumbfounded to learn that everyone sits on the toilet facing away from the cistern, as he has been sitting facing it in order to use the cistern as a shelf for reading material and drinks. Betsy then appears and again excoriates Clyde for leaving the toilet seat up, and takes him home.
Charles K. Armstrong in The Journal of Asian Studies states that the conclusions of the book are "not news". He explains that historian Bruce Cumings, whom Myers excoriates, addresses the influence of "Japanese colonial militarism" on North Korea. Armstrong faults Myers for exaggerating the Japanese angle and suggests that North Korea is "actually closer to European fascism" than to Imperial Japanese fascism, because Imperial Japan lacked a charismatic leader and a mass-mobilizing party. Alzo David-West in Journal of Contemporary Asia claims Myers writes "in the tradition of 'axis of evil' cultural criticism", obscures the differences between Nazism and Stalinism, and overlooks the historical influence of Maoism in North Korea.
Advocating several moral values near the George Orwell's socialism, Jean-Claude Michéa excoriates the leftist intelligentsia that had, according to him, got away from the proletarian and popular world.P. Ansay, « Jean-Claude Michéa, philosophe communautarien socialiste » (in French), in Politique, revue de débats, Bruxelles, n° 73, janu.-feb. 2012, pp. 86-92. He champions collective moral values in a society more and more individualistic and liberal, using only the law and the economy to justify itself. He “considers that the liberal bourgeois models had prevailed upon socialism, in swallowing it up” and “regrets that the socialism had accepted the political liberalism’s theories”Revue française de science politique, (in French), vol.
Luther's 1543 pamphlet On the Jews and Their Lies Martin Luther, an Augustinian monk and an ecclesiastical reformer whose teachings inspired the Protestant Reformation, wrote antagonistically about Jews in his book On the Jews and their Lies, which describes the Jews in extremely harsh terms, excoriates them, and provides detailed recommendations for a pogrom against them and their permanent oppression and/or expulsion. At one point in On the Jews and Their Lies, Martin Luther goes even as far to write "that we are at fault in not slaying them." According to Paul Johnson, it "may be termed the first work of modern anti-Semitism, and a giant step forward on the road to the Holocaust."Johnson, Paul.
Titled after the number of Mirbeau's licence plate, La 628-E8 begins by recounting Mirbeau’s travels to Belgium, whose colonial exploitation of Belgian Congo rubber and abuse of the indigenous people Mirbeau excoriates. The book then proceeds to the Netherlands, where he finds remembrances of Rembrandt, Van Gogh and also Claude Monet. It is during his sojourn in this country that Mirbeau encounters his old friend, the deranged speculator Weil- See, whose reflections on mathematics and metaphysics are among Mirbeau’s most colorful pages. Mirbeau's fictional car trip then takes him to Germany, whose industry, cleanliness, and order stand in contrast to what Mirbeau regarded as the slovenliness and laxity of his own countrymen.
It initially shares similarities with the opening of BioShock, with Booker being taken to a lighthouse with instruction. From there, the trailer's first half shows in-game scenes of settings around Columbia representative of American Exceptionalism such as an amusement park, a public beach, and an ice-cream parlor, prior to demonstration many of the gameplay elements including the Skyhook and the Heavy Hitters. The trailer is set to Nico Vega's "Beast", which, as stated by Times Matt Peckham notes, "excoriates American apathy, in so many words, '[planting] seeds for the Beast of America'". A fourth trailer, "City in the Sky", was released, showcasing many of the game's elements, including Columbia, Booker, Elizabeth, Songbird, and Comstock.
The novel is presented in the form of unfinished memoirs of one Professor Gunther Wünker, born in Ramat Gan, Israel in the 1960s, an anti- Zionist and the founder of the philosophical school of 'Peepology' (the science of peep-show voyeurism). The novel takes place in a fictitious near future period, some 40 years after the State of Israel is dismantled and replaced with a State of Palestine. The novel excoriates what it calls exploitation of The Holocaust for propaganda purposes designed to shield Israel from scrutiny for its "transgressions" against the Palestinians. The perplexed are defined as "the unthinking chosen" who "cling to clods of earth that don't belong to them".
I, D. & J. Sadlier, & Company, 1864 The first part consists of Gildas' explanation for his work and a brief narrative of Roman Britain from its conquest under the Principate to Gildas' time. He describes the doings of the Romans and the Groans of the Britons, in which the Britons make one last request for military aid from the departed Roman military. He excoriates his fellow Britons for their sins, while at the same time lauding heroes such as Ambrosius Aurelianus, whom he is the first to describe as a leader of the resistance to the Saxons. He mentions the victory at the Battle of Mons Badonicus, a feat attributed to King Arthur in later texts, though Gildas is unclear as to who led the battle.
Cups and Saucers, the Gilbert and Sullivan Archive A popular misconception holds that the central character of Bunthorne, a "Fleshly Poet," was intended to satirise Oscar Wilde, but this identification is retrospective. According to some authorities, Bunthorne is inspired partly by the poets Algernon Charles Swinburne and Dante Gabriel Rossetti, who were considerably more famous than Wilde in early 1881 before Wilde published his first volume of poetry. Rossetti had been attacked for immorality by Robert Buchanan (under the pseudonym "Thomas Maitland") in an article called "The Fleshly School of Poetry", published in The Contemporary Review for October 1871, a decade before Patience.In the essay, Buchanan excoriates Rossetti and the Pre- Raphaelite school for elevating sensual, physical love to the level of the spiritual.
Richard Hofstadter accepts that the Bank had too much power to interfere in politics but excoriates Jackson for making war on it. "By destroying Biddle's Bank Jackson had taken away the only effective restraint on the wildcatters... he had strangled a potential threat to democratic government, but at an unnecessarily high cost. He had caused Biddle to create one depression and the pet banks to aggravate a second, and he had left the nation committed to a currency and credit system even more inadequate than the one he had inherited." Hofstadter criticizes Schlesinger's contention that Jackson's program was a forerunner to the New Deal, arguing that the two were distinct because Jackson wanted less government involvement in finance and infrastructure, while Roosevelt wanted more.
The most famous sample of double knitting is the pair of socks knitted simultaneously on one set of knitting needles by Anna Makarovna, the nanny in Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace > When the pair was finished, she made a solemn ceremony of pulling one > stocking out of the other in the presence of the children. Double knit fabric became popular within 1970s fashion; in the 1988 Grammy Award–winning song "Parents Just Don't Understand", Will Smith comically excoriates his mother for forcing him to wear outdated, 1970s-era "double-knit reversible slacks". However, the double-knit fabric referred to is a machine- made, double-thick construction with some similarities to handmade double knitting (durability, reversibility) but none of the unique colorwork and construction possibilities.
Bloy is quoted in the epigraph at the beginning of Graham Greene's novel The End of the Affair, though Greene claimed that "this irate man lacked creative instinct".Reinhardt, Kurt F. The Theological Novel of Modern Europe. New York, Frederick Ungar Publishing Co., 1969, pp 86 He is further quoted in the essay "The Mirror of Enigmas" by the Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges, who acknowledged his debt to him by naming him in the foreword to his short story collection "Artifices" as one of seven authors who were in "the heterogeneous list of the writers I am continually re-reading". In his novel The Harp and the Shadow, Alejo Carpentier excoriates Bloy as a raving, Columbus-defending lunatic during Vatican deliberations over the explorer's canonization.
"Terry Eagleton: Class Warrior." excoriates Fish's "discreditable epistemology" as "sinister". According to Eagleton, "Like almost all diatribes against universalism, Fish's critique of universalism has its own rigid universals: the priority at all times and places of sectoral interests, the permanence of conflict, the a priori status of belief systems, the rhetorical character of truth, the fact that all apparent openness is secretly closure, and the like." Of Fish's attempt to co-opt the critiques leveled against him, Eagleton responds, "The felicitous upshot is that nobody can ever criticise Fish, since if their criticisms are intelligible to him, they belong to his cultural game and are thus not really criticisms at all; and if they are not intelligible, they belong to some other set of conventions entirely and are therefore irrelevant."Eagleton, Terry.
This upsets Stan, who soon breaks down into tears. Later, Mick Jabs, the president of the studio that purchased the video, corners Bailey in the school boys' room, and presents a cease and desist order from his lawyers, threatening to sue him if he licenses the video again. Stan and Butters go on The Dr. Oz Show to promote the movie, but as Dr. Oz continuously tries to pry Butters of his dark secrets in an effort to get him to reveal specifics, Butters finally snaps and attacks Oz. Afterwards, Jabs excoriates Stan because the country did not see Butters as a bully victim, but as a violent psychopath. Soon Jabs himself is cornered in a restroom by Jesus, who threatens him with Hell for his behavior if he does not apologize for his hurtful remark regarding the failed taping.
"A Defence of General Funston" is a satirical piece written by Mark Twain lampooning US Army General and expansionism advocate Frederick Funston. Funston had been a colonel during the Spanish–American and Philippine–American Wars, and Twain had been an outspoken critic of these wars, as immoral ventures of the American state into the imperialist subjugation of foreign peoples and territories. In the piece, Twain essentially excoriates Funston as a scoundrel for the tactics he employed in capturing the Filipino president Emilio Aguinaldo, while at the same time facetiously arguing that Funston is not responsible for any of his actions since it was not Funston himself but his "inborn disposition" that determined his actions for him. As this is the only ground upon which Twain makes his "defence", the overall effect is to ironically and comically emphasize Twain's view that Funston's actions were completely indefensible.
The Jews and Their Lies, (Publisher: Christian Nationalist Crusade, 1948). # to burn down Jewish synagogues and schools and warn people against them # to refuse to let Jews own houses among Christians # to take away Jewish religious writings # to forbid rabbis from preaching # to offer no protection to Jews on highways # for usury to be prohibited and for all Jews' silver and gold to be removed, put aside for safekeeping, and given back to Jews who truly convert # to give young, strong Jews flail, axe, spade, and spindle, and let them earn their bread in the sweat of their brow Luther's essay consistently distinguishes between Jews who accept Christianity (with whom he has no issues) and Jews who practise Judaism (whom he excoriates viciously). In modern terminology, therefore, Luther expresses an anti-Judaic rather than a racist anti-semitic view. The tract specifically acknowledges that many early Christians, including prominent ones, had a Judaic background.
The novel excoriates what it describes as the commercialization of the Holocaust and "argues that the Holocaust is invoked as a kind of reflexive propaganda designed to shield the Zionist state from responsibility for any transgression against Palestinians".Jeffrey St. Clair,'Gilad Atzmon's "A Guide to the Perplexed",' CounterPunch 17 July 2003 Matthew J. Reisz, a reviewer for The Independent, wrote that "As a viciously black satire on Israeli life" the book "is grandiose, childish and nasty, but with just enough connection with reality to give it a certain unsettling power". Darren King in The Observer noted of this "provocative debut novel" that it is "odd to mix knob gags with highly serious assertions", but thought it works because "Atzmon writes with so much style and his gags are so hilarious". Atzmon's second novel, My One and Only Love, was published in 2005 and features as a protagonist a trumpeter who chooses to play only one note (extremely well), as well as a spy who uncovers Nazi war criminals and locks them inside double bass cases which then tour permanently in the protagonist's orchestra's luggage.

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