lambast
IPA: ɫæmbˈæst
verb
- (UK) Alternative form of lambaste [To scold, reprimand or criticize harshly.]
Examples of "lambast" in Sentences
- The group is lambasting a girl.
- Go and needlessly lambaste others.
- It's not the right place to lambaste enemy.
- The commitee has even lambasted the regime.
- The general ordered soldier to lambaste the enemy.
- The sound was similarly lambasted for being cheap and lackluster.
- I think it's an outstanding idea to lambaste them in the morning.
- George Steinbrenner was lambasted in the eighties for meddling too much.
- However the gameplay is widely lambasted as clumsy, archaic, and unrewarding.
- But many delegations and summit organizers are lambasting the document as weak.
- Then you go on to, "lambast," him for writing what you said is basically unintelligible.
- I sense a lot of jealousy in reading these comments, particularly when people lambast Mr. Healy for keeping his record fish.
- He also said that he "just about gags," when he hears Republicans on Capitol Hill "lambast" Democrats and President Obama as "big spenders and socialists."
- I suppose one reason that there is such vehement denial of the “global warming” scene is that it — if “it” exists — is being used by liberal anti-business envirogeeks to lambast the U.S. economic structure, threatening to turn us into a Third World paradise.