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9 Sentences With "blusterer"

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

Against an apocalyptic blusterer like Mr Kim, it certainly should not.
He just fakes his way through them better, and because he's a blusterer and a showman, people don't care.
Only marginally employed, he's a blusterer who can't be counted on to pick up the kids from school, let alone be faithful to his wife.
In August, he made the same kind of noise about vetoing a spending bill, but Democrats welcomed his threats, since if the government did shut down after such bluster, Americans might blame the blusterer-in-chief, not the opposition party.
He's written virtually no Who lyrics, composed virtually no Who music, and in his various Who phases — long-jawed hard-nut mod sneerer, psychedelic crooner/teaser, bare-chested super-rock blusterer — he has essentially enacted the visions and mood swings of the band's prodigious guitarist and songwriter, Pete Townshend.
Shingebis obeyed the summons, and sent the blusterer howling to his home. The People of the Three Fires, the Odawa, Ojibwe and Podawadomi Indians of the Great Lakes area, had many stories about winter. In one, Shingebis is a diving duck who dared Winter. Shingebis decided that he would not trouble himself to fly south for the winter.
In Isaiah 30:7, rahaḇ (insolence, strength) becomes a proverbial expression that gives an allusion to the Hebrew etymology insolence. > Yea, Egyptians [are] vanity, and in vain do help, Therefore, I have cried > concerning this: `Their strength (rahaḇ) [is] to sit still. ()YLT In the Book of Job, rahaḇ (pride, blusterer) occurs in the Hebrew text and is translated in the King James Version as "proud". > [If] God will not withdraw his anger, the proud (rahaḇ) helpers do stoop > under him.
The word "bully" was first used in the 1530s meaning "sweetheart", applied to either sex, from the Dutch boel "lover, brother", probably diminutive of Middle High German buole "brother", of uncertain origin (compare with the German buhle "lover"). The meaning deteriorated through the 17th century through "fine fellow", "blusterer", to "harasser of the weak". This may have been as a connecting sense between "lover" and "ruffian" as in "protector of a prostitute", which was one sense of "bully" (though not specifically attested until 1706). The verb "to bully" is first attested in 1710.
He writes that the boyar scarcely minded when his fortune was being siphoned away by some members of his retinue, but that he publicly humiliated Galaction, and even Domnica, over random expenses. The relationship between Mateiu Caragiale and his one-time patron has attracted special interest from period historians. Early on, the aspiring poet wrote a special piece in honor of his senior friend—called Dregătorul ("The Mandarin"), it is included in one of Bogdan-Pitești's albums. That accord degenerated during the late 1910s, to the point where Caragiale, whose diary spoke of Bogdan-Pitești's homosexuality in dismissive terms (calling him "a blusterer of the anti-natural vice"), laid out a plan to loot the Știrbey-Vodă Street villa.

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