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Showing results for jeremiad. Search instead for leukemias.
Definitions

jeremiad

[jer-uh-mahy-uhd, -ad] / ˌdʒɛr əˈmaɪ əd, -æd /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

It is an odd sort of bubble where jeremiads abound decrying the risks posed by the huge surge in investment in artificial intelligence.

From Barron's

He was preening for the press, warming to another of his vicious, incoherent jeremiads when his Canadian host suggested he join the others in a bit of work.

From Salon

So much for the phony public jeremiads from Norman and his chief recruiter, Mickelson, about how LIV is some kind of liberation from PGA Tour oppression and is the future of the game.

From Washington Post

Matt Steinglass, reviewing it in The New York Times, called it a “brilliant, concise jeremiad.”

From New York Times

Her 2010 novel “So Much for That” was a jeremiad about American health care that cruised on the strength of its characters.

From Washington Post