Use of lambaste in Sentences. 13 Examples
The examples include lambaste at the start of sentence, lambaste at the end of sentence and lambaste in the middle of sentence
For urdu meanings and examples of lambaste click here
lambaste in the middle of sentence
- His first novel was well and truly lambasted by the critics.
- It was then she realised that he was lambasting her with the tennis racquet.
- Teacher's silent half point at me and lambaste after ring:You are a smelly rascal!
- You often publicly lambaste certain industries or practices, but rarely specific companies or people.
- Former All Black internationals lambasted the error-prone display, and radio shows were filled with criticism.
- He gave vent to his anger and lambasted the shipping manager for not having alerted him that Clarion Call was overdue.
- The cool president has turned hot on the stump, stripping to shirtsleeves to lambaste doubters in New Jersey Thursday.
- I know some people may lambaste me for this statement, but in all honestly, there's a strong level of truth in that assumption.
- After an exhausting primary season, the Democratic Party gathers in Denver to anoint its presidential candidate and lambaste the Republicans.
- Pa. ), who then proceeded to lambaste Toyota for failing to act sooner to deal with safety problems and threw in a plug for the U. S. product-liability system.
- The Republican Party holds its pre-election convention in Minneapolis-St Paul to anoint its candidate to succeed President Bush - and to lambaste the Democrats.
- I have met people that praise my country for its equality freedom and wealth and I have met others that lambaste it for its inequality tolerance of iniquity and selfishness.
- Caesar is still so a smiling face of glitter, but the celebration cared chilly Ling Feng then cut up rowdy and had no to rationally lambaste:"You this ......this shameless female!"
Sentence Examples for Similar Words:
- , reprimand
- , remonstrate
- , lambast
- , rag
- , berate
- , cane
- , jaw
- , rebuke
- , lecture
- , scold
- , flog