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10 Sentences With "sermonise"

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

Neither does he sermonise through his characters, a temptation that few directors can resist.
Hearing him sermonise on the subject of Zinedine Zidane's tarnished legacy was nothing short of nauseating.
Though identity politics underpin everything he has written over the past decade, Akhtar is determined not to sermonise.
This is not the time, he says, to stir up anti-American sentiments, or sermonise over US foreign policy.
Both generals, in the intervals of actual war, sermonise each other, and with much the same spirit that they fight.
Though she is careful not to ever pontificate or sermonise, she believes that written works of fiction ought to convey some message.
Instead, he continues to sermonise on the problems of poor countries – and even has the gall to come with his own pet theory.
But speakers are often invited to sermonise at Friday prayers at which a challenge to their views would be thought inappropriate. The problem is greatest in London.
She would call up often and I would sermonise to her about staying away from Manoj, fearing the fallout of such an alliance. They were, however, unconcerned and chatted for hours together. If I did walk into the room while they were talking, Manoj would quickly disconnect the phone and run off to avoid any questioning." She continued, "I even went to Babli's house and told her mother that Manoj and Babli were seeing each other.
The poet goes on to sermonise on the attraction of this life in the third stanza. In the fourth the allegory is introduced between the mosse d'Oriente ("good sir from the Orient") and he d'Occidente. The remainder of the poem is a conversation between the two, with the Occidental inquiring about life in the east, especially about the Oriental's diet. When he finds that the Oriental does not eat nor feels hunger, but is satisfied by merely looking upon a particularly fruitful vine, he remakrs that he "can have no pleasure" (non sactio com'unqua).

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