Word: lambaster
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It’s no surprise that many people in continental Europe lambast the U.S. as a hopelessly introverted country. Global interdependence is something they take for granted, and they react with understandable disbelief to recent U.S. decisions such as the withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and the opposition to both the Kyoto agreement on global warming and the International Criminal Court...
Beyond concerns about fulfilling academicrequirements, many students, it seems, feel thatapplying for credit through OCS means entering atunnel of horrors from which few emerge unscathed.While many students lambast the University'slarger commitment to sending students abroad, mostwere generous in their praise for the staff atOCS...
...staff's decision to use this accident as an opportunity to lambast the council reveals that the staff's true concerns are not with the facility of voting but rather with attacking the council at every opportunity...
...often reverberate in the newsroom. Within the Crimson, I have tried to speak to policies and politics that are right (no pun intended) for this campus and for the world. To have kept to myself would have been to maintain the collegial backslapping for which we as an organization lambast others. For this internal criticism, certainly, I have paid somewhat of a price...
Holub's most ascerbic essays lambast this spurious Soviet science, in which party-approved researchers concoct absurd theories to please their superiors. In their best form, these essays take the form of veiled political satire, an art perfected by the Czechs...