272 examples of declaims in sentences

" Old Robin's almanack was evidently the best of the time, and free from all the astrological cant with which Patridge's Merlinus Liberatus was filled; against which Poor Robin did not a little declaim.

St. Ambrose, the author of the 215th sermon de tempore, bound up with those of St. Austin, and St. Eloy, Bishop of Noyon, declaim particularly against this abuse.

It is said that at a very tender age she taught him to declaim passages from Latin authors, standing on a table, and rewarded him with hot pound-cake.

It is reasonable to imagine, that he, who in the examination of publick questions, calls in the assistance of artifice and sophistry, is actuated rather by the rage of persecution, than the ardour of patriotism; that he is pursuing an enemy, rather than detecting a criminal; and that he declaims against the abuse of power in another, only that he may more easily obtain it himself.

he declaims, and Mrs. Witherspoon sweeps across the threshold."

"As well might a humanitarian socialist declaim against English prejudices to the proud and exclusive fellows of Oxford and Cambridge.

But the people against whom you so justly declaim; are not Christians.

Five hundred men assemble in a hall and listen to a speech from a partisan, while five hundred others in a hall in the next street are cheering a second partisan who declaims against the first.

No matter who writes, who declaims, who intrigues, who is alarmed, or what leagues are formed, THIS IS TO BE A CATHOLIC COUNTRY; and from Maine to Georgia, from the broad Atlantic to broader Pacific, the 'clean sacrifice' is to be offered daily for quick and dead."

If he gives us an Account of the Prodigies which preceded the Civil War, he declaims upon the Occasion, and shews how much happier it would be for Man, if he did not feel his Evil Fortune before it comes to pass; and suffer not only by its real Weight, but by the Apprehension of it.

Just as the cockney declaims about Richmond Hillthe inland view from Mont-Martre, of a clouded day, is worth twenty of itbut just as the provincial London cockney declaims about Richmond Hill, so has the provincial American been in the habit of singing the praises of the Highlands of the Hudson.

Just as the cockney declaims about Richmond Hillthe inland view from Mont-Martre, of a clouded day, is worth twenty of itbut just as the provincial London cockney declaims about Richmond Hill, so has the provincial American been in the habit of singing the praises of the Highlands of the Hudson.

True, the muezzin no longer declaims from it some sonorous verse of the Koran at the hour of prayer.

In this alone methinks the ancients err'd, Against the grossest follies they declaim; Hard they pursue, but hunt ignoble game.

600 When two or three were gather'd to declaim Against the monarch of Jerusalem, Shimei was always in the midst of them; And if they cursed the king when he was by, Would rather curse than break good company.

If aught for which so loudly they declaim, Religion, laws, and freedom, were their aim, Our senates in due methods they had led, To avoid those mischiefs which they seem'd to dread: But first, e'er yet they propp'd the sinking state, To impeach and charge, as urged by private hate, Proves that they ne'er believed the fears they press'd, But barbarously destroy'd the nation's rest!

Yet Dryden, in the preface, declaims against the "inopem me copia fecit," and similar jingles of Ovid.

CORRECTION OF PROOF-SHEETS, iv. 321, n. 2. CORSICA, Antipodes, like the, ii. 4, n. 1; Boswell's subscription for ordnance, ii. 59, n. 1; 'dangers of the night,' i. 119, n. 1; France, ceded to, ii. 59, n. 2; Genoa, revolts from, ii. 59, n. 2, 71, n. 1, 80; hangman, i. 408, n. 1; Johnson declaims against the people, ii. 80; lingua rustica, ii. 82; Seneca's epigrams on it, v. 296; mentioned, iii. 201.

170; willing to write his Life, ii. 351; luxury, declaims against, iii. 282; 'never completes what he has to say,' iii. 57; Pope's lines on him, i. 127, n. 4; Prendergast and Sir J. Friend, ii. 182; Prince of Wirtemberg and the glass of wine, ii. 180; vivacity and knowledge, iii. 56; Wesley, Charles, ill-uses, i. 127, n. 4.

He declaims with great passion: "These are intelligent ants.

There are some who declaim against the use of any and all kinds of meat for food, and advocate a purely vegetable diet.

In a word, Ithuel, as relates to such things, is what is commonly called law-honest, with certain broad salvoes, In favor of smuggling of all sorts, in foreign countries (at home he never dreamed of such a thing), custom-house oaths, and legal trickery; and this is just the class of men apt to declaim the loudest against the roguery of the rest of mankind.

If he gives us an Account of the Prodigies which preceded the Civil War, he declaims upon the Occasion, and shews how much happier it would be for Man, if he did not feel his Evil Fortune before it comes to pass; and suffer not only by its real Weight, but by the Apprehension of it.

"Returning out of Asia," declaims Mr. Shandy, "when I sailed from Aegina towards Megara" (when can this have been?

The Doctor is in ecstacies over it, takes it as a special personal favor, and declaims luminously and constellationally about writing one's name among the stars, like that frisky cow who, in jumping over the moon, upon a time, made the milky way.

272 examples of  declaims  in sentences