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"vituperate" Definitions
  1. to abuse or censure severely or abusively : BERATE
  2. to use harsh condemnatory language

15 Sentences With "vituperate"

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

Useless to argue with the tradesmen, to expostulate, to vituperate.
Jolly, to abuse or vituperate, sometimes to bear up or bonnet.
It is not my design, therefore, to vituperate my deceased friend, Toby Dammit.
Bibliolators may vituperate us, persecute us, or imprison us, but they cannot refute us.
Deviation from scenic propriety has only to vituperate itself for the consequences it generates.
Among younger writers, Jonathan Franzen can vituperate about, say, the Kindle, but seldom goes for the jugular.
They vituperate the humanists in comically bad Latin, which is perhaps the best part of the joke.
He could offer no counter argument to them, but continued to vituperate the sins of the white people.
Literature and the pulpit were inevitably the interpreters that she employed to vituperate the sins of the people.
And yet... So there is nothing left but to vituperate art, whose venom is so sweet that it no longer irritates.
On occasion he could stoop to praise one party and vituperate another, but that was his tongue serving his worldly interest.
Bespatter it, vituperate against it, strongly insist that any man or woman harbouring it is a fool or a knave, or both.
Bespatter it, vituperate against it, strongly insist that any man or woman harbouring it is a fool or a knave, or both.
Rather than vituperate the celebrity villain du jour, many economists think it's time to have a serious consideration of how drug prices reflect their value.
E moves back to a long shot and watches O barge through and on his way. The man replaces his hat, takes off his pince-nez. and looks after the fleeing figure. The couple look at each other and the man “opens his mouth to vituperate”Beckett, S., Collected Shorter Plays of Samuel Beckett (London: Faber and Faber, 1984), p 165 but the woman shushes him, uttering the only sound in the whole play.

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