English to Malay Dictionary harangue

harangue

pidato panjang dan tajam
definition
verb
the kind of guy who harangued total strangers about PCB levels in whitefish
lecture (someone) at length in an aggressive and critical manner.
noun
When he finished his lengthy harangue , everyone left, and Lohia wandered over to the nearest paanwallah to ask if Hanif was out yet.
a lengthy and aggressive speech.
example
Sun boss Scott McNealy gave the DoJ his lengthiest 'harangue' at the company's AGM for stockholders yesterday.
they were subjected to a ten-minute 'harangue' by two border guards
When he finished his lengthy 'harangue' , everyone left, and Lohia wandered over to the nearest paanwallah to ask if Hanif was out yet.
Judy said: ‘We are all very proud of our group and don't really like 'haranguing' people for money all the time.
She would be 'haranguing' me about my ancient dress sense.
I offer these comments only in the interest of historical perspective. I have no interest in starting or participating in 'harangues' of any kind.
Instead it's always the ‘political’ ones that get the camera, the 'haranguers' and culture-warriors with the blarney touch, able to motivate viewers' emotions with their words.
Returning to his old political ways, the general has again taken to delivering evangelical 'harangues' and has challenged the media opposed to his campaign.
We avoid political 'harangues' - or for that matter political anything - here at Eclectic Mind, but I do try not to completely stick my head in the sand.
In the claustrophobic gloom of Fez, a small basement club popular with students in downtown New York, Joan Rivers is standing on stage 'haranguing' her audience.
It stretches the powers of even the most experienced muckrakers and soapbox 'haranguers' to find the least routine and boring bits of nonsense to present to us as the news.
They applauded, I suspect, for much the same reason so many members of the black Christian middle-class applaud the 'harangues' of Black Muslim minister Louis Farrakhan.
As a former SFU undergrad, I enjoyed 'haranguing' you privileged children/right wing ideologues (you all seem so young, you BC Young Liberallies).
Sayle's prose is the same mixture as before - darkly comic 'harangues' interspersed with infomercials about politics, fashion, and the world of celebrity.
‘These are the 'haranguers' , the reminders, the people who will constantly do this stuff,’ he said.
By the end of the story the professor has abandoned his native tongue altogether, and is 'haranguing' his readers in Pagolak, insisting that if only they'd pay due attention, then ‘tak nalaman namele Pagolak kama’.
The truth is, though, that neither Churchill's historical studies nor his sectarian 'harangues' have much to do with why his name now roils two college campuses 1,700 miles apart.
In the summer of 1950 when Nathan turns away from Ira, part of that retreat was in reaction to Ira's 'harangues' about the violence of American reaction in Korea and the real possibilities of atomic warfare.
At the end some foreign-looking gentleman started 'haranguing' him in a language I didn't understand and Galloway looked even more paranoid than usual.
The kind of 10-minute blast of unadulterated grimness which turns up out of the blue late at night on BBC2, 'haranguing' you with supposedly meaningful images of alcoholic depressives shouting at each other in tower blocks.
Comedy is a good way of nipping that tendency in the bud and it is a tendency I do have when I'm 'haranguing' my friends.
Picasso responds that he is not sure what such a picture would look like, at which point his 'haranguer' takes a photo of his wife from his wallet and says, ‘‘There, you see, that is a picture of how she really is’.’
Yes, he's a well-compensated good soldier, but that hardly seems to hinder half of this league's 'haranguers' , so give the man his props.
The majority of countries in the world do not conduct foreign relations through 'harangues' and impulsive actions intended to sate the irrational instincts of a minority audience.
These banquets, where a spartan meal set the stage for political 'harangues' masquerading as toasts, concentrated the diffuse energies hostile to Louis-Philippe's politics.
Although the organisation uses shock tactics, including picketing abortion clinics and 'haranguing' teenage girls and women seeking terminations, it has not been directly involved in any violent action.
Close was a powerful preacher renowned for his tirades against Catholicism and this further annoyed Trollope, who had seen the harm caused by such 'harangues' during his long residence in Ireland.
Not that I don't think he was funny, he was, and could be very funny, but his last stuff Rants in E minor pretty much eschews the jokes in favour of him shouting and 'haranguing' his audience.
Spencer Tracy as the Clarence Darrow character and Fredric March as the demagogue based on William Jennings Bryan have a field day in their speechifying and 'harangues' .
In the opening stages of the series, O'Connor sought to demonstrate his peerless courage and wit by ostentatiously 'haranguing' the children and housewives who appeared before him for their musical shortcomings.
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