jeremiad
Appearance
See also: jeremiád
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From French jérémiade, from Jérémie, from Latin Ieremias, from Hebrew ירמיה (yirm'yá, “Jeremiah”). Named after biblical prophet Jeremiah, who lamented the moral state of Judah and predicted her downfall.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]jeremiad (plural jeremiads)
- A long speech or prose work that bitterly laments the state of society and its morals, and often contains a prophecy of its coming downfall.
- Synonyms: lament, lamentation, tirade; see also Thesaurus:diatribe
- 1895, Mary Gaunt, The Moving Finger: A Digger's Christmas:
- "Father Maguire," he said in the broadest of Cork brogues, without the ghost of a smile on his grave Irish face, "is it a song yez wantin'? Well, thin, it's just a jeremiad I 'd be singin' yez, an' not another song at all, at all."
- 2006 May 5, The Columbus Dispatch:
- “This is precisely the manner of Balkanization that Schlesinger cautioned us about in his prescient jeremiad on multiculturalism, The Disuniting of America.”
- 2007 May 19, Charlotte Higgins, “US government trying to seize new Michael Moore film, says producer”, in The Guardian[1]:
- Cannes is smacking its lips in anticipation of filmmaker and provocateur Michael Moore's latest jeremiad against the US administration, which receives its premiere at the film festival today.
- 2011 July 18, John Cassidy, “Mastering the Machine”, in The New Yorker[2], →ISSN:
- His warnings ignored in Washington, Dalio issued more jeremiads to his clients. “If the economy goes down, it will not be a typical recession,” his newsletter said in January, 2008.
- 2015 March 30, Michael Billington, “Look Back in Anger: how John Osborne liberated theatrical language”, in The Guardian[3]:
- What few of us realised at the time was that Osborne, while endorsing most of Jimmy’s jeremiads, also had a sneaking sympathy for his father-in-law, Colonel Redfern, an upper-class relic of the Raj.
Translations
[edit]long speech or prose work
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Further reading
[edit]- jeremiad on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Book of Lamentations on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Swedish
[edit]Noun
[edit]jeremiad c
- a jeremiad
Declension
[edit]Declension of jeremiad
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Categories:
- English terms borrowed from French
- English terms derived from French
- English terms derived from Latin
- English terms derived from Hebrew
- English eponyms
- English 4-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- Rhymes:English/aɪəd
- Rhymes:English/aɪəd/4 syllables
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with quotations
- English terms derived from the Bible
- Swedish lemmas
- Swedish nouns
- Swedish common-gender nouns