The Bush administration excoriated the Arab peninsula's network for broadcasting Osama bin Laden videos.
Like Spain, Britain has been excoriated by Mr bin Laden, and it has troops in Iraq.
He excoriated Clinton and expressed disbelief that she hadn't read the cables about security concerns.
The Washington Post reported that Democratic governors were scoffing at it, and the liberal commentators excoriated it.
NPR: 'Talking Right': Why the Left Is Losing, Linguistically
Bush, the 2008 case about the rights of accused terrorists, he excoriated the Bush Administration and Congress.
Throughout his presidential campaign, Mr. Obama excoriated Mr. Bush's counterinsurgency strategy in Iraq, insisting it could not succeed.
Piotroski ran a number of tests to see if a company was being unfairly maligned, or justifiably excoriated.
They are excoriated for commercialising the games they play, and find themselves widely shunned by the true aficionados.
Speaking to the Jerusalem Post, Huckabee excoriated the president for not being more supportive of Egyptian strongman Hosni Mubarak.
But the peace camp is at war now, side by side with those it has long excoriated as warmongers.
The revolutionaries operated a printing press on the premises, spewing out pamphlets that excoriated British occupiers and their puppets.
Hayden will be excoriated for having used warrantless wiretaps to try to monitor the battlefield communications of such foes.
Meanwhile, the abolitionists running the underground railroad were excoriated for their unlawful behavior.
He has also boasted of Malaysia's attractiveness to direct investors, even as he has excoriated speculators and western economic imperialism.
Last fall, Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney got excoriated for his remark that 47% of the nation pays no income tax.
FORBES: Romney's 47% Has a Venerable Legacy in the 1913 Origins of the Income Tax
This offends some civil libertarians, and the Associated Press excoriated the NYPD for the practice in a series of stories in 2011.
Scolnick had at one point been excoriated by analysts for passing up the hypertension medicine, which Bristol had touted as a blockbuster.
Panetta excoriated Israel for not being involved in negotiations with the Palestinians.
The Russians do not appreciate being excoriated, mocked, and vilified for doing something, shielding a nasty regional ally, that we do every day.
Since then, excoriated by study after study showing how supersizing has adversely affected the nation's collective corpus, Mc-Donald's has continued to supersize, of course.
Mr Blair excoriated the Tories for their past opposition to women's votes and a national health service, and their present defence of fox-hunting, General Pinochet, and hereditary peers.
In particular, Halperin has consistently excoriated the U.S. intelligence community.
Palin excoriated Obama on his handling of US foreign policy.
It has underpinned its friendships with other regimes excoriated in the West: pre-division Sudan, for example, or Myanmar's junta before it donned civilian clothing and gave charm a chance.
Despite this conclusive evidence that Obama himself proposed the sequester, the media sat on its hands as the President falsely excoriated the Republicans for originating and insisting on the sequester.
FORBES: White House Admits (Third Time) President Obama Fibbed On Sequester
Mitt Romney has been excoriated because his firm, Bain Capital, sometimes acquired companies that could only be made attractive to lenders and buyers by laying off significant numbers of employees.
Travis Laster excoriated a scrum of law firms for filing hastily drafted lawsuits over the Revlon merger, then negotiating a settlement that accomplished nothing other than allowing the merger to proceed.
In increasingly bracing language, the two excoriated the other.
"The NYPD is under attack, " the mayor said in a speech that lauded the department for lower crime rates, raised the specter of terrorism and excoriated supporters of legislation that would rein in stop-and-frisk.
应用推荐