harangue, tirade

harangue, tirade
An harangue is a passionate and vehement speech, one that is usually lengthy and delivered before a public gathering: "The candidate indulged in an (or a) harangue that dealt more with his opponents than with the issues at hand." A tirade is a prolonged outburst of emotionally toned, vehement denunciation of some person or object. The distinctions between harangue and tirade are these: (1) A tirade is always an attack; an harangue may be only a long, violent speech. (2) An harangue is always made to an audience of some size; a tirade can be directed to or at one person only.

Dictionary of problem words and expressions. . 1975.

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  • harangue, tirade —    Each is sometimes used when the other is intended. A tirade is always abusive and can be directed at one person or at several. A harangue need not be vituperative but may merely be prolonged and tedious. It does, however, require at least two… …   Dictionary of troublesome word

  • harangue, tirade —    Each is sometimes used when the other is intended. A tirade is always abusive and can be directed at one person or at several. A harangue need not be vituperative but may merely be prolonged and tedious. It does, however, require at least two… …   Dictionary of troublesome word

  • tirade — See harangue. See harangue, tirade …   Dictionary of problem words and expressions

  • harangue — See harangue, tirade …   Dictionary of problem words and expressions

  • tirade — tirade, *diatribe, jeremiad, philippic can all mean a violent, often long winded, and usually denunciatory speech or writing. Tirade implies a swift emission of heated language, sometimes critical, sometimes abusive, but usually long continued… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • harangue —  , tirade  Each is sometimes used when the other is intended.  A tirade is always abusive and can be directed at one person or at several. A harangue, however, need not be vituperative, but may merely be prolonged and tedious. It does, however,… …   Bryson’s dictionary for writers and editors

  • Tirade — Ti*rade , n. [F., fr. It. tirada, properly, a pulling; hence, a lengthening out, a long speech, a tirade, fr. tirare to draw; of Teutonic origin, and akin to E. tear to redn. See {Tear} to rend, and cf. {Tire} to tear.] A declamatory strain or… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • harangue — [n] long lecture address, chewing out*, declamation, diatribe, discourse, exhortation, hassle, jeremiad, oration, philippic, reading out*, screed, sermon, speech, spiel*, spouting, tirade; concepts 51,278 harangue [v] give a long lecture accost,… …   New thesaurus

  • harangue — [hə raŋ′] n. [ME (Scot) arang < OFr arenge < OIt aringa < aringo, site for horse races and public assemblies < Goth * hrings, circle: see RING2] a long, blustering, noisy, or scolding speech; tirade vi., vt. harangued, haranguing to… …   English World dictionary

  • harangue — I noun abusive speech, bombast, contio, declamation, declamatory speech, diatribe, disquisition, effusion, exhortation, expatiation, invective, lecture, prelection, tirade, vehement speech associated concepts: harassment II index address (talk… …   Law dictionary

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