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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a tirade about" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing a long, passionate, and often angry speech or piece of writing that criticizes or complains about something.
Example: "During the meeting, she launched into a tirade about the lack of support from management."
Alternatives: "a rant about" or "a diatribe regarding".
Exact(59)
According to Hawkins, Miscavige began a tirade about the ad's shortcomings.
This led to a tirade about the pernicious influence of corruption in higher education.
When I first met my future wife, she got a tirade about the magic of libraries".
Some went on "a tirade" about the government and rising taxes, Mr. Buffett said — declining, of course, to name them.
Ms. Page gets the best bit: a tirade about racially inequitable treatment of plagiarists.
Just as he was about to finish his set, he launched into a tirade about the pitfalls of Xanax abuse.
We were seated with two men, one of whom, upon learning that Svetlana came from Boston, launched into a tirade about what an unfree country America was.
Patrick McShane and Craig Brown, in their 20s, say they will vote Labour but launch into a tirade about the lack of jobs.
That encounter was not cordial, as Archie went off on a tirade about hippies and protesters, culminating in his rendition of "God Bless America".
(And since Scarborough went on a tirade about public television a couple of weeks ago, I have made up my mind to love it more than ever.
On the other, Streep launched into a tirade about Disney, calling the late animator a "hideous anti-Semite who "formed anti-Semite whon anti-Semitic industry lobby".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com