He castigates prize judges for giving the top awards to books for reasons extrinsic to literature. |
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For the second time in recent months Michael Winner castigates a treacle tart for its lack of treacle. |
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The malpractices, incompetence, cronyism and corruption he rightly castigates are not a product of devolution. |
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He castigates prize judges for giving the top awards to books for reason extrinsic to literature. |
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In print, on his radio show and in private, the growling newshound frequently castigates reporters for not breaking bigger and better stories. |
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In Western Europe the far right castigates the European Union as an agent of globalization. |
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The country's president, Vaira Vike-Freiberga, castigates corruption and muddle in the country's administration with increasing venom. |
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The Auditor General of Canada also castigates the people who decided to sell the Canada Communication Group. |
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Saudi Arabia's powerful interior minister, who is next in line to the throne, castigates the Brothers for showing little gratitude for receiving refuge during past waves of persecution. |
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Savage castigates the men, tells them to stop pitying themselves, and musters their morale as they prepare for longer and more dangerous daylight missions far into German territory. |
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With affable manner and wisecracking wit in English and Italian, he castigates the lost years under communism and soothes western leaders by praising constitutional checks and balances and a free judiciary. |
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The writer at present castigates the official socialism, to which he blames its demagogy and its anticlerical sectarianism, after the separation of the church from the government. |
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He cites Thomas Huxley, Darwin's Bulldog, as an example of one who espouses a veneer theory, and castigates him for straying from his Darwinian roots. |
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