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"lambaste" Definitions
  1. to beat or whip severely.
  2. to reprimand or berate harshly; censure; excoriate.

108 Sentences With "lambaste"

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

People lambaste "playing politics," but "playing politics" serves a purpose.
Amter says it's unfair to lambaste people for offering their opinions.
On Thursday, China's state media continued to lambaste the United States.
Ben Sasse, who used to lambaste the president, has mostly gone silent.
Let us lambaste the tech industry when it sins, which is often.
The president used his campaign-style gathering to again lambaste the media.
Trump continued to lambaste Jones and promote Moore on Twitter last week.
Ted Cruz (R-TX) and other Republicans continually lambaste Big Tech over alleged bias.
Trump used this connection to lambaste McCabe and paint the Russia investigation as politically motivated.
Donald Trump loves to lambaste the media, but he's a pure product of the media.
It's all very well to lambaste the judiciary for knuckling under eventually to Franklin Roosevelt.
During the 2016 Republican presidential primary season, Romney held a news conference to lambaste candidate Trump.
Trump and his fellow Republicans like to lambaste Clinton for her alleged "pay-for-play" schemes.
MICHAEL I was waiting for Timberlake to lambaste Rupert from the stage, but it didn't happen.
"You can't lambaste Germany one day and then ask them for something else the next," she said.
Critics lambaste this as "Obamacare lite," and in a purely structural sense that's exactly what it is.
Contradicting critics who lambaste their generation as complacent and ignorant, they proved to be mature, passionate and capable.
A staunch defender of the district's promise and possibilities, he is also quick to lambaste its dangerous closed-mindedness.
This is particularly the case for the Lib Dems, who Labour lambaste for their role in the Coaliton government.
Mr. Parlato started a website, The Frank Report, which he uses to lambaste prosecutors, Mr. Raniere and the Bronfmans.
Graham began the trend, claiming his five minutes to lambaste Democrats for their handling of the allegations against Kavanaugh.
Taking to Twitter to lambaste Nordstrom for withdrawing his daughter Ivanka's clothing line, he unleashed an outpouring of consumer love.
During the campaign, Trump would go on air with various networks, and then lambaste them at rallies to cheering crowds.
It contrasts with the speeches typically delivered by Trump, who prefers to lambaste his opponents and skip detailed policy discussions.
That interview prompted Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the top Senate Republican, to lambaste then-candidate Trump about his NATO stance.
Limbaugh, who counts Trump as a friend, has used his radio platform to lambaste Democrats and advance a far-right agenda.
Across the developed world, concerned citizens are pouring into the streets to lambaste feckless politicians for failing to protect the planet.
Democrats cannot lambaste Trump and [Roy] Moore, and then turn a blind eye to our own who face credible charges against them.
Among the points of interest are how vigorously he will lambaste Democrats; whether he will address the controversy swirling around Virginia Gov.
Conservative critics have often used sex, abortion and the church's more conservative teachings to lambaste liberal Kennedys and paint them as secularists.
There does seem to be a method to Trump's global madness: He likes to lambaste allies but flatter and cajole America's adversaries.
So Trump, when given his best opportunity to lambaste Russia on the world stage and display America's global leadership, let Putin off easy.
" The 13-year-old went on to lambaste Jamie Spears, Britney's conservator for more than 12 years, saying, "He's a pretty big d***.
At one point, with Fox News back on the main screen, frequent Trump critic Karl Rove came on to lambaste both Clinton and Trump.
He will lambaste Trump as a phony populist and a friend of Wall Street CEOs who hit the jackpot with the tax overhaul law.
In that moment, at least, she was decidedly unlike Trump, who has consistently failed to personally lambaste Russia or President Vladimir Putin for anything.
Eventually, Mr. Donaway tired of watching Sheriff Shoar lambaste the agent, so he retired early last year, forfeiting, he said, a large sum of money.
Duterte read his prepared 50-minute speech in full, unlike his two previous addresses, when he abandoned his script to improvise, ramble and lambaste his critics.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump has gone on Twitter to lambaste a number of companies for cost over-runs, or high prices, or foreign manufacturing.
Republicans have poured money into advertisements that lambaste Democrats on that move, casting their evolution as a sign of a corroding culture that's too politically correct.
"Democrats cannot lambaste Trump and Moore, and then turn a blind eye to our own who face credible charges against them," Jayapal said in a statement.
Hungary will hold national elections next year and Orban, often quick to lambaste the EU capital, has already rolled out a campaign called "Let's stop Brussels".
Back in August, Trump used his Twitter account to lambaste the company for its production shift and seemed to back a boycott he said was already underway.
The fear is not unfounded, with Democrats from out of state continuing to lambaste Iowa for its heavily white population after Castro dropped out of the race.
Less than five months into office, Trump has proven himself to be impulsive and visceral, turning to Twitter to lambaste perceived adversaries in 140 characters or less.
Just asking: Did anyone notice the irony of the crude, discriminating language and signs used by some to lambaste a president they condemn as crude and discriminating?
They took the opportunity leading up to the vote to lambaste the FDA for what they said was a lax approach to approving potentially addictive opioid painkillers.
She was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize, featured on the cover of Time magazine and traveled Europe by train to lambaste senior figures in government and industry.
While Trump's attention has been somewhat diverted this weekend to Rubio, he's continued to lambaste Cruz as a liar, an attack that may have injured the Texas senator.
New image casually applied, he moved to and conquered America in one fell swoop — and managed to lambaste the country for its short attention span at the same time.
He used the social media site to attack the Mayor of London, and lambaste his own Justice Department for pushing only a "watered down" version of the travel ban.
Trump has slammed the scheduled testimony as more "presidential harassment" and on Monday continued to lambaste the Mueller investigation, calling it "fundamentally illegal" and "A TOTAL SCAM!" in a tweet.
Conservatives love to lambaste campus liberals for practicing "identity politics," a poorly defined term that boils down to any kind of politics that takes concerns about identity-based oppression seriously.
He used an opportunity in Riyadh to lambaste the Saudis for their diplomatic blockade of Qatar and disastrous war in Yemen (even though the US helps Riyadh in that fight).
Or, with the winds of modern morality at your back, you could lambaste Forster as a hypocrite and a coward who charged his characters with doing what he himself could not.
Matt's mom, Amy, was none too pleased about the car carnage ... and scrambled to make a GoFundMe page to get her kid a new whip ... and to lambaste the rowdy Wildcats responsible.
The chance to check the Fed chair's influence over the U.S. economy could be especially enticing to Trump, who appointed Powell and has used Twitter to lambaste him for almost his entire tenure.
Fact-checkers and media scolds would lambaste a candidate who leaned heavily on this kind of rhetoric, and even in the Age of Trump most Democrats still care about wrist-slaps from gatekeepers.
What these critics lambaste as an attack on liberalism is actually its best form: the logical extension of liberalism's core commitment to social equality and democracy, adapted to address modern sources of inequality.
Trump can lambaste Canada and make all kinds of threats...but the fact is the NAFTA can only be revised if Canada agrees to implement the package after full review and Parliamentary consideration.
The Republican nominee continued to lambaste Clinton for the comments, made during a fundraiser last Friday night in New York City, and instead insisted that his was a campaign of hope, optimism and issues.
If the president rejects out of hand the C.I.A.'s work, or introduces uncertainty by praising it one day only to lambaste it on Twitter that afternoon, many officers will vote with their feet.
Tim Scott, who was among the many politicians on both sides of the aisle to lambaste Trump's response to the violent clashes between white nationalists and counter-protesters at the white supremacist rally in Charlottesville.
"The problem is not that Mueller's decisions will be skewed by a staff that leans Democratic, but rather that this tilt will allow Trump and many others to lambaste all of his decisions as political."
But instead of taking a moment to reflect on its achievements, industry leaders used their annual conference to both lament and lambaste what they believe are unfair attacks on LNG from a variety of sources.
Thursday marks 3043 days since Grisham took on the position, and she has yet to hold a single briefing, though she frequently appears on the Trump-friendly Fox News to lambaste the president&aposs critics.
Just as we rarely lambaste Stephen Spielberg's classic movie "Schindler's List" for encouraging pogroms, it is inaccurate to assume that the only reaction that players can have to questionable video game content is an antisocial one.
Eminem offered a detailed and searing critique of President Trump on Tuesday, using his rapping skills to lambaste the commander-in-chief and his policies during a performance broadcast as part of the BET Hip Hop Awards.
Liberated from this chore, he soon regained his usual temper; visiting the bereaved in Texas and Ohio, he found the time to lambaste local officials, along with "Sleepy" Joe Biden, "the LameStream media," and other customary targets.
" The issue, he writes, "is not that Mueller's decisions will be skewed by a staff that leans Democratic, but rather that this tilt will allow Trump and many others to lambaste all of his decisions as political.
It was devastating to hear her lambaste, without naming them, the shameless Republicans who have embraced a "fictional narrative" propagated "by the Russian security services themselves" under which Ukraine, not Russia, attacked American democratic institutions in 2016.
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.
What's more, McSally was once upon a time regarded as a relatively moderate Republican and has at least tacitly pushed back on Trump, so her decision to lambaste a reporter in a quintessentially Trumpian manner caught some off-guard.
In December 2016 the company declined to comment when Trump used his Twitter account to lambaste Chuck Jones, an Indiana union organizer who criticized him; the Washington Post reported that Jones was inundated with threatening phone calls as a result.
Several senators, including Democrat Edward Markey of Massachusetts and Joe Manchin of West Virginia, took the opportunity leading up to the vote to lambaste the FDA for what they said was a lax approach to approving potentially addictive opioid painkillers.
In July 1063, McCain returned from brain surgery to the Senate floor to lambaste "bombastic loudmouths" on the television, radio and internet and plead for a return to a more civilized political age, when compromise and regular order forged bipartisan solutions.
While providers are sure to lambaste any alternative to commercial insurers — where they can glean higher payments than from a government program with set rates — the Steyer plan says the public option payment system would run on fee-for-service.
If you live in the mainstream media world, the New Media Upside Down can be hard to find — the only real crossover between the two worlds is on Twitter, where its leaders lambaste mainstream news reports often with the aim of discrediting them.
One crucial question is the extent to which the inspector general will provide clarity on whether political bias tainted the outcome of the investigation, providing the President with further ammunition to lambaste those in law enforcement or offering a more nuanced assessment.
News that emphasizes partisan divides between staunch Democrats, who lambaste fake news stories about Hillary Clinton, and Republicans, who castigate BuzzFeed's posting unsubstantiated claims about Donald Trump, fuels partisans' perceptions that the country is polarized, to some degree creating that very reality.
One minute he's defending the release of texts that serve as ammunition for Mueller critics and Trump allies to lambaste the investigation; the next, he's defending Mueller from criticism by those same anti-Mueller conservatives and Trump allies — and putting his own job at risk.
Insulting McCain's war record didn't hurt him in 2016 And at a rally last week for Steve Bannon, the President's former chief strategist -- still loved by many Trump voters --one attendee was heard to shout "hang him" when Bannon began to lambaste McCain from the podium.
In a rambling 45-minute campaign speech on Monday, Donald Trump managed to: lambaste Hillary Clinton, make an appeal to Bernie Sanders's supporters, criticize Sanders's progressive values, censure Clinton for not picking a more progressive running mate, call Sanders soft, and champion Sanders's position on trade.
It was Rutger Bregman, a Dutch journalist and historian, who used his speaking time at the conference to lambaste the rich attendees for failing to talk about the one thing we know could fight wealth inequality: raising taxes for the kind of people who go to Davos.
While the White House Correspondents' Association held its annual dinner last night, Full Frontal host Samantha Bee threw her own event, Not the White House Correspondents' Dinner, and used sketches based on The Man in the High Castle, The West Wing, and SNL to lambaste the Trump administration.
SNL is once again dipping into its deep well of celebrity cameos to lambaste a news cycle so ridiculous that it hardly requires parody — Martin has hosted the show 15 times, second only to Alec Baldwin, and he frequently returns for bit roles, like his rendition of Stone.
The foot thief described in detail how he and a comrade had hiked miles to the village of Alcalde and sawed the foot off the statue one wintry night in 1997 — an attempt to lambaste the celebrations of the Spanish conquest 400 years earlier by Oñate and his men.
In Sunday's Axios Presented by Bank of America newsletter, Mike Allen just asks this question about Saturday's historic Women's March in Washington, D.C. Just asking: Did anyone notice the irony of the crude, discriminating language and signs used by some to lambaste a president they condemn as crude and discriminating?
Gene Ryan, president of the Baltimore City Fraternal Order of Police, said he was pleased with the judge's ruling and took the occasion to lambaste State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby and demand she call off the "malicious" prosecutions of the two officers who remain to be tried and the one scheduled to be retried.
Vic Gold, a pugnacious political spokesman who helped pave the way for modern conservatism by making Barry Goldwater less opaque to the press in the 1960s and collaborating with Spiro T. Agnew to lambaste the news media for liberal bias in the ′70s, died on Monday in Alexandria, Va. He was 88.
Buttigieg clearly tried to please both sides with his answer: He found a way to lambaste Netanyahu while still showing solidarity with Israel and its alliance with the US. That comment puts the mayor firmly in the more pro-Israel camp among Democratic presidential candidates — a camp in which he may actually be the leader at this point.
TRUMP CELEBRATES HIS ACQUITTAL: "[Trump] set off a new phase of political warfare, taking to the East Room of the White House to lambaste his opponents and praise his defenders during a bizarre and caustic performance celebrating his Senate acquittal that followed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's declaration that he was 'impeached forever,'" our colleagues Toluse Olorunnipa and Mike DeBonis report.
The best moment in the finale is when Grandmother Muriel (Anne Reid) gathers with her family to lambaste a world that has slowly turned toward automation instead of caring for the human beings who used to make it run, a world where those who benefit from capitalism are all too happy to continue doing so, even if the system grinds so many others within its gears.
Recent stories: -Feds push back deadline for new Dakota Access review -EPA moves to repeal Obama climate rule 'in its entirety' -Musk: Tesla can rebuild Puerto Rico power grid -Trump taps ex-lobbyist for EPA No. 2 job -Trump administration to reconsider sage grouse conservation plans -House to consider disaster relief next week -Court blocks Trump's 'unlawful' delay of Obama methane leak rule -Dems lambaste Trump's 'outrageous' EPA chemical safety pick -Hurricane Maria worsens Puerto Rico's water woes -EPA launches industry partnership program for regulating -Lawmakers try again on miners' pension bill -Perry seeking to prop up nuclear, coal plants View the discussion thread.
63 The bid failed, yet also later Montejurra did not openly challenge or lambaste the Traditionalists; articles of their top intellectuals like Rafael Gambra were printed in Montejurra as late as in 1968,Rafael Gambra, Politica fiduciaria y santidad, [in:] Montejurra 33 (1968), p. 4, see also García Riol 2015, p. 140 and until the very late 1960s Montejurra might have seemed "a mosaic" of not necessarily compatible outlooks.
This causes everyone to be outraged and starts to lambaste Meg for this and Chris literally kicks her out of the kitchen. That night, Peter enters the master bedroom and tells Lois to move over to have sex with another woman. Deeply angered, Lois decides to move out to a low-budget apartment, taking the kids. When Quagmire finds out, he jumps on the opportunity to pursue a relationship with Lois.
He became best known for talking a suicidal young gay man down from the roof of Toronto City Hall,"Youth threatens City Hall jump, fire chief, minister talk him down". The Globe and Mail, January 16, 1974. and used the ceremony where he was honoured by the city to lambaste politicians for failing to reform anti-gay laws."Ad rejected: Pastor airs complaint at council ceremony". The Globe and Mail, February 7, 1974.
Alwi's early career included working at the Voice of Indonesia radio station in Yogyakarta. He later studied at King’s College in the UK where he met with future Malaysian political leaders, including Tun Abdul Razak. As a diplomat, Alwi served tenures in several embassies, including Bern, Vienna and Manila. He became disillusioned with Sukarno’s dictatorial tendencies. He controversially settled in Kuala Lumpur at the height of Indonesia’s “Konfrontasi” with Malaysia where he engaged, using a pseudonym, in a broadcast to lambaste Sukarno.
Bernard R. "Buddy Blue" Seigal (December 30, 1957 – April 2, 2006) was an American, San Diego musician, music critic and writer, who performed and often wrote under his stage name Buddy Blue. He was a founding member of The Beat Farmers, a Southern California rock band that blended country roots music and rock 'n' roll. As a music critic, he was known for his straightforward style of critique that often used colorful language and original metaphors to either praise or lambaste musicians whom Seigal liked or disliked.
Despite Jimmy's assertion that his commercial to recruit clients for the Sandpiper Crossing lawsuit was a success, the partners at Davis & Main lambaste him for airing it without their consent. Even though the majority of the partners want to fire Jimmy for cause, Cliff decides to give him a second chance with the understanding that he'll be under a great deal more scrutiny going forward. Jimmy leaves Kim an urgent voicemail requesting that she call him before speaking to Howard. Jimmy's too late because Kim is already being grilled by Howard and Chuck at the HHM offices over her failure to warn them about Jimmy's ad.
In April 1895, Kuroda helped to organize the 4th Domestic Exposition to Promote Industry, held in Kyoto; he also submitted Morning Toilette for exhibition in the same venue. Although he was awarded a prize for the painting, the exhibition of a picture of a nude woman before so many visitors outraged many, and led to a furor in the press where critics condemned the perceived flouting of social standards. None criticized the technical aspects of the painting, choosing instead to lambaste Kuroda for its subject matter. Kume, Kuroda's friend from his Paris days, wrote a spirited defense of the nude figure in art for newspaper publication, but this helped little.
In a review of Wawro's 1996 book on the Austro-Prussian War, Lawrence Sondhaus criticizes Wawro for falsely claiming that the Austrian Empire intended to destroy the Kingdom of Italy in the Third Italian War of Independence of 1866. Wawro gives no evidence for his thesis of Austrian aggression and then proceeds to lambaste the Austrians for not achieving "goals they never intended to pursue". Indeed, Wawro always portrays the Austrians as incompetent fools. Wawro also ignores Italy's "sweeping war aims"; her intentions of seizing Trieste, Istria, and Dalmatia, aims that were prevented by the Austrian victory at the Battle of Lissa, and claims the Italians only wanted to acquire Venetia.
After China's withdrawal from Vietnam, Sino-Soviet relations remained locked in tense military confrontation along the border, while diplomatic relations remained frozen. While the Soviet Union continued to supply and support the Vietnamese government in Cambodia, China remained opposed to all Soviet involvement in Southeast Asia; the regime continued to lambaste Soviet and Vietnamese "regional hegemony." Minor skirmishes continued along the southern border with Vietnam and the northern border remained heavily militarized. Historian Peter Vamos estimates that "about one fourth of Soviet ground forces and one third of its air force were stationed along or in the region of the Sino-Soviet border" in the early 1980s.
She later shares that her father, "a handsome, two-bit gangster like [Don]", owns a candy store and has friends and "obligations" connected to the mob. Don, after initially denigrating her approach to advertising and overhearing her lambaste an estranged lover on the phone, during which she reveals she does not cook and does not want to clean up after him, takes an interest in her. Eventually, the two embark on a secret romantic relationship, during which time Don expresses admiration for her work. When Sally stows away on a train and a stranger brings her to Don's office, Faye reveals her discomfort with children and, although Sally liked her, her fear that she'd failed some test as a result.
The Dutchman Van Wouw came to the ZAR as a young man and settled in Pretoria, teaching drawing classes at the state gymnasium and a girls' school after a brief stint as a store clerk. An admirer of Kruger's like Marks, Van Wouw considered the President's tailcoat and top hat an inseparable part of him, something which critics would later lambaste Van Wouw for portraying. To them he replied: "Without them I would not recognize him! With the tailcoat and top hat, I would! "Van Wouw tried to portray the "everyday" Kruger: Kruger on his porch, with citizens at 6:00 in the morning seeking him out not necessarily to discuss politics but perhaps simply to seek advice on healing a sick cow or consolation on a recent loss.
It was written by "Scribblerus Secundus," its title page announced (a reference to the Scriblerus Club of Jonathan Swift, Gay, Pope, Robert Harley, Thomas Parnell, John Arbuthnot, and Henry St. John), and it was the Tragedy of Tragedies, which did for drama what Pope's Peri Bathos: or The Art of Sinking in Poetry had done for verse. Fielding placed a critical apparatus on the play, showing the sources of all the parodies, and thereby made it seem as if his target had all along been bad tragedy and not the prime minister. (Fielding's later novel, Jonathan Wild, makes it clear that such was not the case, for it used exactly the same satirical device, "the Great Man," to lambaste the same target, Robert Walpole.) Henry Fielding was not done with ministry satire. His Covent-Garden Tragedy of 1732 was set in a brothel amongst the prostitutes.
" In February 2004, In-Stat/MDR, publisher of the Microprocessor Report, bestowed NGSCB with its Best Technology award. Malcom Crompton, Australian Privacy Commissioner, stated that "NGSCB has great privacy enhancing potential [...] Microsoft has recognised there is a privacy issue [...] we should all work with them, give them the benefit of the doubt and urge them to do the right thing." When Microsoft announced at WinHEC 2004 that it would be revising NGSCB so that previous applications would not have to be rewritten, Martin Reynolds of Gartner praised the company for this decision as it would create a "more sophisticated" version of NGSCB that would simplify development. David Wilson, writing for South China Morning Post, defended NGSCB by saying that "attacking the latest Microsoft monster is an international blood sport" and that "even if Microsoft had a new technology capable of ending Third World hunger and First World obesity, digital seers would still lambaste it because they view Bill Gates as a grey incarnation of Satan.
While Andrew Jackson won a plurality of electoral votes and the popular vote in the election of 1824, he lost to John Quincy Adams as the election was deferred to the House of Representatives (by the terms of the Twelfth Amendment to the United States Constitution, a presidential election in which no candidate wins a majority of the electoral vote is decided by a contingent election in the House of Representatives). Henry Clay, unsuccessful candidate and Speaker of the House at the time, despised Jackson, in part due to their fight for Western votes during the election, and he chose to support Adams, which led to Adams being elected president on the first ballot. A few days after the election, Adams appointed Clay his Secretary of State, a position held by Adams and his three immediate predecessors prior to becoming president. Jackson and his followers promptly accused Clay and Adams of striking a "corrupt bargain," and continued to lambaste the president until the 1828 election.

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