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Etymologies
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Examples
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Harangue me enough and I promise I'll write about your top picks next holiday season, so don't be shy!
Tony Sachs: The Twelve Scotches Of Christmas: Whisky Picks For Last-Minute Shoppers Tony Sachs 2011
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Harangue me enough and I promise I'll write about your top picks next holiday season, so don't be shy!
Tony Sachs: The Twelve Scotches Of Christmas: Whisky Picks For Last-Minute Shoppers Tony Sachs 2011
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DJs include dark garage great Oris Jay, dubstep auteur Kuedo AKA Jamie Vex'd, and Lazer Sword's Lando Kal, as championed on these pages by Scuba in his Harangue The DJ column opposite.
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The Queen being retir'd into her Apartment, as I told you, the Princess made an Harangue to the People, wherein she own'd her Guilt touching the
Exilius 2008
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Harangue a graceful appearance, and make the entrance to his cause as neat and splendid as the importance of it will permit.
Cicero's Brutus or History of Famous Orators; also His Orator, or Accomplished Speaker. Marcus Tullius Cicero
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Also the middle kind of Orator, who is distinguished by his equability, provided he only draws up his forces to advantage, fears not the perilous and doubtful hazards of a public Harangue; and, though sometimes he may not succeed to his wishes, yet he is never exposed to an absolute defeat; for as he never soars, his fall must be inconsiderable.
Cicero's Brutus or History of Famous Orators; also His Orator, or Accomplished Speaker. Marcus Tullius Cicero
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"Harangue de l'Evesque de Vallence," _apud_ Recueil des choses mémorables (1565), i.
The Rise of the Hugenots, Vol. 1 (of 2) Henry Martyn Baird
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But, in a public Harangue, the style of his successors the Gracchi was far more easy and lively: and yet, even in their time, the Roman Eloquence had not reached its perfection.
Cicero's Brutus or History of Famous Orators; also His Orator, or Accomplished Speaker. Marcus Tullius Cicero
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The Bawd having made an end of her Harangue, the Gentlewoman told her she was much oblig'd to her for that sense she had of her Condition, which she acknowledg'd to be what she represented it: But told her she durst not make use of the Remedy, she had propounded, First, because it was Sinful, and
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For though public speaking is one thing, and disputing another; and though there is a visible difference between a private controversy, and a public Harangue; yet both the one and the other come under the notion of reasoning.
Cicero's Brutus or History of Famous Orators; also His Orator, or Accomplished Speaker. Marcus Tullius Cicero
ikos commented on the word Harangue
Harangue- a loud, passionate speech. (Websters Dictionary, pg. 172)
September 27, 2010