Someone who rants and raves; speaks in a violent or loud manner.
1Macduff, to the huge delight of the gallery, out-Macduff'd the average ranter.
2There was more than a tinge of the street ranter in his utterance.
3Marat, indeed, still passes for a furious ranter among people of some intelligence.
4You'll take me for a street ranter if I go on.
5A mere ranter, a frothy mob orator, would have been silenced long before.
6A ranter preaches there between the services-anexcellent, fiery, Christian man, they say.
7It's got to be fought with the pen-since I am no street corner ranter.
8Even the Senate seemed to have fallen under the coarse spell of this mouthing ranter.
9Some ranter at a street corner, I suppose.
10However, during her verbal tirade, the ranter in question used the K-word to attack her fellow citizen.
11K-word ranter pleads guilty The case has not been the open-and-shut investigation many thought it would be.
12The utterance had very little of the lurid materialism, the grotesque horror of the ordinary ranter's hell.
13Afraid of me, like that ranter Crowley.'
14When you are famous, you can't be the unknown, the innocent, the mad ranter from the margins.
15He was not a 'shouter' or a 'ranter,' but spoke and acted in a quiet, manly way.
16And when that ceases to be the case, Fox eases the ranter out, as it did with Beck.