I must out into the snow and tempest,’ declaims Hjalmar (The Wild Duck, p.
Wordsworth, of 'profundity and transcendentalism,' sprang from the same root as that which declaimsagainst his 'unintelligible fuss about common feelings and common things.
He goes next to the friars Preachers, whose magnificent monastery he describes; there he meets a fat friar, whodeclaims against the Augustines.
He declaims against the many who attributed to themselves the name of doctors, simply because they knew how to cure some diseases.
Whilst Abulcasis bitterly declaims against the barbers, because they, in spite of their ignorance, permit themselves to perform operations on the teeth, and especially to extract them, Guy de Chauliac speaks in quite a different tone.
Ben Johnson in his Dedicatory Epistle of his Fox has somewhat considerable upon this Argument; And declaims with a great deal of zeal, spirit, and good Sense, against the Licentiousness of the Stage.
She declaims with a great deal of Satyr against intemperate Women; she concluded rather to die then dishonour her Husband and Stain her Family.
In his 37 Homily upon the Eleventh Chapter of St. Matthew he declaims more at large against the Stage.
And afterwards he gives Lesbonicus a great deal of sober advice,[23] and declaims heartily against Luxury and Lewdness!
In the Pamphlets Carlyle declaims against democratic methods, and in Frederick and Cromwell we are presented with incarnations of autocratic methods.
In one of his essays, Characteristics, he goes near the Roussean idea when he declaims against self-consciousness, and deliberately gives a preference to instinct.
Robespierre declaims against the eagerness with which they set about the work of destroying religion.
Buzot declaims in the tribune against the despotism of the convention.
He declaims some patriotic sentiment, in the style of the Niebelungenlied, on the subject of Hermann the Cheruscan, and then asks for a contribution for the statue of that national hero.
After much chattering she sings the ballad, and at the end declaims her intention of saving the Dutchman to the music which is employed when she actually accomplishes that feat.
He does what undoubtedly the minstrels of old did--freely declaims his verses, occasionally twanging his harp.
Vex no more Your trumpets and your timbrels, as of yore, To ease the laboring moon; her single yell Can drown their clangor, and dissolve the spell She lectures too in Ethics, and declaims On the Chief Good!
A Franciscan, named John Vitraire, of Tournay, whose monastic spirit seems not of a very elevated description, nevertheless, declaims forcibly against the corruption of the Church.
But to most this meal is rendered a superfluity by the supper of the night before--that condemned meal, which everybody declaims against, and everybody partakes of.
He declaims against the folly and crime of the modern world in not making philosophers kings, and announces his intention of seeking complete solitude.
And at parties in the evening, With inspired brow and eye, He declaimsbefore the ladies My immortal poesy.
Appreciable refinement had been reached in Quintilian's age, for he scores the comic actor who departs too far from reality and pronounces the ideal player him who declaims with a measured artistic heightening of everyday discourse.
Consider the ludicrous spectacle of the rapidly moving legs and the flailing arms, with the actor's face turned toward the audience, as he declaims sonorously of his haste to perform his vital errand, while making but a snail's progress.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "declaims" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.