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"pontificated" Antonyms

38 Sentences With "pontificated"

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

They've tweaked it, they've pontificated upon it, on and on and on.
"You cannot legislate evil, you cannot legislate stupid," he pontificated to Fox 32.
They were sown when these particular politicians pontificated about morality during their bids for office.
Simmons pontificated on other genres of music too, including the popular genre of Electronic Dance Music.
Anchors and subanchors pontificated about it atop chyrons, logos and tiny graphics showing the activity of the stock market.
Instead, they pontificated on the easy question not actually on the table: Should we have a massive invasion of Iran?
While other outlets pontificated on the ethics of allowing anchors to wear pins, Fox News went all in from the jump.
Crosby is still a great player, that writer pontificated, but we must now concede that he is only a point-per-game type.
A number of venture pundits and pop culture mavens have previously pontificated why celebrities, and hip hop stars in particular, are drawn to startups.
At an NBC/Axios–hosted public discussion on energy policy Thursday, Perry pontificated on the importance of fossil fuels as a force for good.
The candidates talked briefly about energy, reiterated their opposing stances on taxes, and pontificated on how the US should continue their involvement in Syria.
In the videos, Mr. Beierle pontificated from a dimly lit bedroom, with an unmade bed and a pile of cardboard boxes in the background.
Schultz pontificated that in the age of Trump, the coffee chain could create "an antidote" and provide a "sense of community" for the politically downtrodden.
For years, I have confidently pontificated on topics that I think are important but that I have little experience of — child abuse, racism, sexism, sex.
As the Post noted, whereas Trump once regularly tweeted and pontificated about Venezuela, the issue has been moved to the backburner in the last month or so.
Top investors shared insight into European venture capital, well-known individuals and firms made announcements (large and small), and entrepreneurs pontificated about the future of startups in their respective regions.
At his recent debate against Cruz, O'Rourke pontificated about "walls, Muslim bans, the press as the enemies of the people, taking kids away from their parents" and America's place in the world.
A retired attorney in his 80s who's drunk and pontificated here so consistently over the past six decades that they instinctively reserve his booth for him, is happy to fill in the blanks.
If either guy had scored, you can bet that plenty of old-school hockey types would have pulled out their soapboxes and pontificated about hot-shot glory boys disrespecting the game and showing up the other side.
It was an alarm sounded by Cruz himself at a private meeting on Monday evening here in Iowa, when Cruz pontificated on the idea of a Trump win and what the consequences would be for the GOP.
Just last June shares in Tesla, the electric-car maker he runs, had halved in six months as investors doubted whether a recent capital raise was enough; short-sellers pontificated about the imminent collapse of the company.
They regularly resulted in her waiting until I pontificated myself asleep, when she'd return to her room and cry herself to sleep until she had to work, consuming the whole of her evening and, in a way, her life.
For years, they have pontificated that if Apple wants to continue to grow, it needs to make the kind of major mergers and acquisitions that many of its contemporaries—including Google, Microsoft, Facebook—have made, and that means investing billions.
In 2014, the liberal radio host Bill Press had hosted Sanders at his Washington home to talk over the decision to run with Senate staffers, senior Democrats, and strategists, along with "wise guys and gals who pontificated a lot," recalled Longabaugh.
But while Lady Bird Johnson and the other speakers pontificated at length about projects to beautify highways and plant trees in disadvantaged areas, Kitt took a notably different tack: When it was her turn to speak, she vehemently denounced the Vietnam War.
In it, the notoriously cranky Punk pontificated on just how bad WWE and John Cena were, comparing Cena to the then-working in TNA Hulk Hogan and calling Triple H (Vince McMahon's son-in-law and probable heir to the company with Stephanie McMahon) a doofus.
Experts pontificated that in the unlikely event Macron were able to actually win the presidency, once in office he would potentially be severely hampered by the rather radical handicap of representing a party that boasted a tiny minority of seats in parliament and thus no real legislative power.
As a columnist and editorialist with a doctorate in politics, he shaped and supported his opinions through firsthand reporting, defying what he once called the patron of his "unruly calling," St. Simeon Stylites, who pontificated for 19893 years from atop a stone pillar (or column) in fifth-century Syria without abandoning his perch.
In response to breaking the world record for most-liked Instagram post, the account's owner wrote "This is madness. What a time to be alive." Hours later, Kylie Jenner posted a video on Instagram of her cracking open an egg and pouring its yolk onto the ground, with the caption: "Take that little egg." Pundits pontificated on the meaning of the egg picture's dominance over social media's "first family".
The Sundance Channel airings attracted more viewers in the 18-to-24 age range than was usual for their audience, which typically comprised men over age 25. After the second episode aired, cultural critic Lee Siegel wrote about the show for The New Republic. He pontificated on transgender experience, and characterized the story as a unique form of drama or tragedy. In his introduction, he commented on the general absence of reviews for the show in major news publications.
Our philosopher despised writing as an act of estrangement ; it resembled masturbation in that it was an act of identification with words –images of nothingness-and not with nothingness itself. Speech, on the other hand represented the moment, the emotion-it was as cathartic as it was euphoric. Oral discourse was integral to the culture of the coffee house of the early 1960s in Baghdad . Most of the intellectuals of his generation pontificated endlessly over dominoes in the morning and regrouped in the local bars at night.
A new generation had initiated obscurantism, continuing from where Asaf Haler Celebi's surrealism had left off in the 1940s. Ilhan Berk perhaps Turkey's most daring and durable poetic innovator, who acted as spokesman for the group (often identified as the Second New) pontificated "Art is for innovation's sake." The forms and values of classical poetry, too, are kept alive by a group of highly accomplished formalists who are clustered mainly around the monthly Hisar which ceased publishing at the end of 1980 after 30 years. His works have been translated into over thirty languages.
However, unlike their predecessor, these caste mafia groups were not concerned with 'development', but mainly viewed elections and democracy as a way of gaining control of the state, which would enable them to level social inequalities. This new state envisioned a government of "Social Justice" through caste empowerment. Within the context of "social justice" corruption pontificated by the caste mafias became tolerated, and in some cases, as in the province of Bihar, even celebrated. The very nature of caste politics inherently means that there are no boundaries between "civil society" and "political society", as demonstrated by the proliferation caste mafia.
The neglected representational and near-abstract artists, not the abstractionists, need a champion these days." Although none of these figurative advocates had the stature of critics like Clement Greenberg or Harold Rosenberg, they were recognized by critics as radicals, "represent[ing] a new generation to whom figurative art was in a sense more revolutionary than abstraction."Martica Sawin, "Jan Müller: 1922–1958," Arts Magazine 33 (February 1959), p. 39 A conversation recollected by Thomas B. Hess emphasized the perceived power of the critic: "It is impossible today to paint a face, pontificated critic Clement Greenberg around 1950.
" Sally Vincent, writing for The Guardian, has pontificated about the dynamics of Sharon's relationship with both her parents in 2001. She suggested that viewers felt sorry for Sharon "because not only had her [birth] mother given her away, but her adoptive parents were the legendary Dirty Den and the feckless Angie, erstwhile landlord and lady of The Queen Vic, who were always too busy being dirty and feckless, in our opinion, to take proper care of their little girl. We knew enough about family psychology to know that all those presents they lavished upon her were no substitute for presence. We knew what neglect and emotional absence can do to a growing girl.
Sturzo was a committed anti- fascist who pontificated on the ways in which Catholicism and Fascism were incompatible in such works as Coscienza cristiana and criticized what he perceived to be "filo-fascist" elements within the Vatican. Sturzo also wrote about the thought of Saint Augustine of Hippo and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz as well as Giambattista Vico and Maurice Blondel. He did this in order to elaborate on what he called the "dialectic of the concrete" and opposed this dialectic as a veer towards absolute idealism and scholastic realism. Sturzo was not among the 14 PPI members who defected--under pressure from Pope Pius XI--to approve the Acerbo Law in July 1923.
In fact, he > pontificated, an object in such conditions remains stationary or in uniform > and rectilinear motion. But, after having thus overthrown the old physics, > he discreetly clarified that rectilinear and uniform movement does not > really exist, but is a fiction conceived by the mind to facilitate > measurements. Now if the object not moved from without stands still or has a > fictitious movement, it means, strictly speaking, that it stands still in > every case, just as ancient physics said, and that Galileo, by means of a > new system of measurements, could only explain why it stands still. That is > to say, Galileo did not dispute ancient physics, he merely invented a better > way of proving that it was correct, and that the testimony of the senses, > being true enough, does not have in itself proof of its veracity, which was > well known since the time of Aristotle.
Lucinda Franks, "A Twisted Victorian Love Tale That Won't Die Out", New York Times. Billington said that "Murphy takes the stock line that Ruskin was a domestic bully who pontificated about art and beauty while recoiling from living flesh", but the play gave no indication of Ruskin's radical political ideas. Margo Jefferson, theatre critic for The New York Times in her essay REVISIONS; Lurking Behind the Victorian Propriety, Wit and Pluck. wrote: The Countess, by Gregory Murphy, reminds us of the terrifying imbalance of power between those who claim adult authority and those they treat like children … It is a revisionist drama, since Ruskin’s wife, Effie, was seen for years as one of those people who surround a genius and have no real needs, privileges or rights that he is bound to respect … The scene in which Effie confesses [the non-consummation of her marriage] to her friend Lady Eastlake is harrowing.

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