See also: Jeremiad Jeremiah One Jeremy Jerez Jere
1. Jeremiad At the same time as it diagnosed delinquency, therefore, the Jeremiad professed optimism and faith
Jeremiad
2. From the Cambridge English Corpus On the one hand, we are accused of uttering Jeremiads; on …
Jeremiads
3. A Jeremiad is a speech or literary work expressing a bitter lament or a righteous prophecy of doom.
Jeremiad
4. The Jeremiad is a rhetorical tradition—a literary genre, even—that has appeared in every phase of America’s history—from King Philips War to Hurricane Katrina
Jeremiad
5. That’s where the Jeremiad got its American stamp, where it was most commonly applied and most fully developed.
Jeremiad
6. Jeremiads and Conversion Narratives Forms of Puritan Rhetoric: The Jeremiad and the Conversion Narrative For a much more extensive description than appears on this brief page, see the works listed in the Selected Bibliography on Puritanism.
Jeremiads, Jeremiad
7. The Jeremiad is specifically a form of epideictic rhetoric
Jeremiad
8. The Jeremiad are a Sworn faction who believe the Contagion is divine in nature.
Jeremiad
9. 5 synonyms of Jeremiad from the Merriam-Webster Thesaurus, plus 32 related words, definitions, and antonyms
Jeremiad
10. Jeremiad: a long angry speech or scolding.
Jeremiad
11. "Jeremiad" is the love interest of Candavere in "Excaliferb"
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12. 1 Physical appearance 2 Relationships 2.1 Candavere 3 Appearances Jeremiad looks physically identical to his present day counterpart, but he wears clothing that is befitting of the medieval times
Jeremiad
13. A Jeremiad is a literary work or speech expressing bitter lament, prophecies of doom, or mournful complaints about society
Jeremiad
14. Yet every page of it is a Jeremiad, an exhortation to his countryfolk to stop short on the road to ruin
Jeremiad
15. A Jeremiad is a form of rhetoric in which the speaker/writer sharply laments a society’s sins and shortcomings, and predicts that his people’s offenses will lead to their demise and collapse
Jeremiad
16. What does Jeremiad mean? A literary work or speech expressing a bitter lament or a righteous prophecy of doom
Jeremiad
17. A Jeremiad is a long written composition with very mournful or dire overtones
Jeremiad
18. If someone suggests that a piece of writing is a Jeremiad, they usually mean that it could benefit from some judicious editing to tone down the nature of the
Jeremiad, Judicious
19. The Jeremiad can challenge your assumptions, shake you out of apathy, spur reflection, and inspire changes in your beliefs and habits
Jeremiad
20. If that post left you looking for some incisive and thought-provoking Jeremiads to grapple with, below we offer a list of 16 recommended cultural critiques.
Jeremiads
21. Jeremiad definition: a long mournful lamentation or complaint Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples
Jeremiad
22. A Jeremiad is a long literary work, usually in prose, but sometimes in verse, in which the author bitterly laments the state of society and its morals in a serious tone of sustained invective, and always contains a prophecy of society's imminent downfall.
Jeremiad
23. How to say Jeremiad in English? Pronunciation of Jeremiad with 2 audio pronunciations, 4 synonyms, 1 meaning, 2 translations, 2 sentences and more for Jeremiad.
Jeremiad
24. The "Jeremiad" is named after the biblical lamentations of Jeremiah ("I had planted thee a noble vine, wholly a right seed: how then art thou turned into the degenerate plant of a strange vine unto me?" (chapter 2, verse 21)
Jeremiad, Jeremiah
25. Of course, we don't seek to understand the Jeremiad strictly for …
Jeremiad
26. A "Jeremiad" -- Results of the General Court Synod (1679) [The Jeremiad was a formulaic statement of concern by Puritan ministers or magistrates that the colony had fallen into a pattern of declining piety (a paradigm historians refer to as "declension").Usually that declension had specific ramifications for God's displeasure with the colony in New England -- heavy casualties from warfare with
Jeremiad
27. Jeremiad - a long and mournful complaint; "a Jeremiad against any form of government" complaint - an expression of grievance or resentment Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection
Jeremiad
28. Jeremiad: 1 n a long and mournful complaint “a Jeremiad against any form of government” Type of: complaint an expression of grievance or resentment
Jeremiad
29. The Jeremiad has created a long-standing history for itself in American literature, largely because of America’s Puritanical roots
Jeremiad
30. The “American Jeremiad” was essentially invented by the Puritans to foster social harmony and preserve their lives in the foreign, dangerous New World.
Jeremiad
31. Definition of Jeremiad noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary
Jeremiad
32. ‘His Jeremiad sounds a generational alarum: The days of isolated, tormented, anti-commercial white male geniuses are done and done.’ ‘All of the above were duly cited, along with appropriate Jeremiads about ‘we have become like Sodom.’’
Jeremiad, Jeremiads
33. The Jeremiad style sermon of the late 17th century is the typical fire-and-brimstone style sermon we associate with the Puritans
Jeremiad
34. Jeremiad definition: a long mournful lamentation or complaint Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples
Jeremiad
35. Hanneh Breineh, in a friendly manner, settled herself on the sound end of the bed, and began her Jeremiad.: Morton Eden's reports to Grenville form an unrelieved Jeremiad.: But the series isn't a finger-wagging Jeremiad, nor is it an unrelieved bummer to watch.: There was just truth enough in the Jeremiad to make it sting.: To-night, however, there were variety and spice with his Jeremiad.
Jeremiad, Just
36. Jeremiad by Think Good Audio, released 04 December 2020 1
Jeremiad
37. Such is the purpose of the tradition of the “Jeremiad,” in substance and style a rhetorical method born of Puritan sermons in the 17th and 18th centuries, and perfected by America’s greatest
Jeremiad
38. Jeremiad used in a sentence How to use Jeremiad in a sentence as a noun Yes, but the silver lining is that you'll open your thesaurus and learn words like"Jeremiad""screed""phillippic""tirade"MOC is a strong advocate for scala and clojure, so I figure he's ok "This page originally continued with an anti-Microsoft Jeremiad.
Jeremiad
39. Begun by Puritans, the American Jeremiad, a rhetoric that expresses indignation and urges social change, has produced passionate and persuasive essays and speeches throughout the nation's history
Jeremiad
40. Antonyms for Jeremiad include approval, compliment, flattery, praise, calm, recommendation, harmony, peace, quiet and panegyric
Jeremiad
41. From Jeremiad to Jihad: Religion, Violence, and America corrects these misunderstandings
Jeremiad, Jihad
42. When Sacvan Bercovitch’s The American Jeremiad first appeared in 1978, it was hailed as a landmark study of dissent and cultural formation in America, from the Puritans’ writings through the major literary works of the antebellum era
Jeremiad
43. The expectation of Jeremiad is so deeply ingrained in Americans’ political consciousness that it might seem to be universal.
Jeremiad
44. Keillor’s Jeremiad is wrong on so many levels, and proceeds from a place of such
Jeremiad
45. Synonyms for Jeremiad in Free Thesaurus
Jeremiad
46. 5 synonyms for Jeremiad: diatribe, fulmination, harangue, philippic, tirade
Jeremiad
47. What are synonyms for Jeremiad?
Jeremiad
48. In her dual emphases on the resilience of natural systems and of us, their alterers, she is onto something that lies beyond the "unpleasant, guilt-inducing scold about our reprehensible environmentalists' profligacy" that she associates with environmental Jeremiads.Jerermiad is a telling term, with its Puritan associations, and Muir clearly savors its Yankee particularity, as she does her own
Jeremiads, Jerermiad
JEREMIAD
A jeremiad is a speechor literary work expressing a bitter lament or a righteous prophecy of doom. Adjective: jeremiadic. Pronunciation: jer-eh-MY-ad The term is derived from the Old Testamentprophet Jeremiah, author of the Book of Jeremiahand the Book of Lamentations.
Definition of jeremiad : a prolonged lamentation or complaint also : a cautionary or angry harangue the warnings became jeremiads against the folly of overemphasis on science and technology at the expense of man's subjective and emotional life — Ada Louise Huxtable Synonyms Did You Know? More Example Sentences Learn More about jeremiad
Jump to navigation Jump to search. A jeremiad is a long literary work, usually in prose, but sometimes in verse, in which the author bitterly laments the state of society and its morals in a serious tone of sustained invective, and always contains a prophecy of society's imminent downfall.
jer·e·mi·ad. (jĕr′ə-mī′əd) n. A literary work or speech expressing a bitter lament or a righteous prophecy of doom. [French jérémiade, after Jérémie, Jeremiah, prophet traditionally considered the author of the biblical book of Lamentations, from Late Latin Ieremiās; see Jeremiah1 .]