Married to a multimillionaire, she has hustled, harangued, conspired and connived to get Athens to the finish line. |
|
At one point a nearby neighbour harangued the protesters cursing at them and demanding they move. |
|
Stockbrokers who can listen empathetically to their clients are less likely to be harangued when an investment tanks. |
|
The women on the other boats were usually too busy being harangued to enjoy themselves. |
|
There the Indonesian Mother Superior harangued them for forty-five minutes on the moral and spiritual duties of parents. |
|
When I go to meetings I get harangued by the public about speeding vehicles and by people asking for speed cameras to be installed. |
|
In occasional diocesan synods, they harangued their clergy and issued reforming regulations. |
|
We busted into houses with shotguns, cleaned up decapitated bodies, harangued local authorities. |
|
Ali, however, was on good terms, both with the gatekeepers and the guards, both of whom hailed and harangued him in a friendly manner as he stopped briefly to speak with them. |
|
The only time I ever saw him in any way discomposed and submissive was while he was being harangued by his mother on the telephone. |
|
Continually ridiculed and harangued by his relatives, he remained untarnished in both body and soul. |
|
In reality, I have actually been harangued by many in the Conservative Party about my position to not support the budget. |
|
At Djoulfa, the last stop before leaving Russian territory, the commissioner Ollari harangued the soldiers a last time to return in Russia only as friends. |
|
Oddly enough, Mike Atherton once harangued him from cover at Edgbaston in 1996 when he thought that Tendulkar had given the umpire too much information about whether he had snicked the previous delivery. |
|
After being harangued by a worker at BAE systems over Britain's EU membership, Ed Miliband moved on to Nelson and Colne college in Pendle for one of his weekly People's Question Time sessions. |
|
In response to the ruling, he harangued tens of thousands of supporters and municipal workers from a balcony in the Plaza Bolívar on consecutive nights. |
|
I regret that the manufacturers have harangued the European Parliament and the Council with a whole ream of arguments which either cut no ice or were simply false. |
|
He stood and harangued me for not supporting the budget. |
|
In the 19th century, pacing up and down the streets of the major European towns, she-donkeys wandered around and were led by tradesmen who harangued the population shouting «Donkey's milk, good donkey's milk! |
|
He has sweet-talked, cajoled, harangued, nagged, strong-armed and shamed government officials, international financiers and business leaders into doing more to rebuild Haiti. |
|