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1
Hence, many were led to
declaim
against
the procedure of the zealous friar.
2
In a storm of newly patented virtue they
declaim
against
the "big" ones.
3
Burke at once began to
declaim
against
the French.
4
The Roman Catholics treat the Protestant Christians as impious; the latter incessantly
declaim
against
Roman superstition.
5
The Catholics in general
declaim
against
that society; and yet are all governed by individuals of it.
6
No further need of the Voltaires, the Rousseaus and the Diderots to
declaim
against
kingcraft and priestcraft.
7
Roman Catholics treat, as impious, Protestant Christians; and the latter incessantly
declaim
against
the superstition of the Catholics.
8
People
declaim
against
the science of metaphysics, as if it were the disease itself; whereas it is the remedy.
9
But they found it easier to
declaim
against
the evil than to suggest any practical method of stopping it.
10
He may as usefully
declaim
against
friendship, comradeship, the love of man for woman or of mother for child.
11
To harbor the persecuted preachers, to neglect the fasts of the church, to
declaim
against
the vices of the clergy, were capital offences.
12
It is in vain that physicians
declaim
against
this article, since it forms between seven and eight per cent of the mother's milk.
13
There are some who
declaim
against
the use of any and all kinds of meat for food, and advocate a purely vegetable diet.
14
However, Theodora kept him from the subject by the force of her imperturbability, and he could only
declaim
against
her to his wife.
15
A fine secret that, to
declaim
against
a virtue which destroys sentiment in a sage, and establishes one that admits of no operation.
16
He could hardly credit this, and his wrath increased at the stupidity of the servants; it seemed to relieve him to
declaim
against
them.
declaim
against
declaim