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are rabble
noun
A mob; a disorderly crowd.
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We know your old songs are rabble-rousing crowd-pleasers.
"Her family were rabble rousers and union organizers and all that kind of thing.
The Getty's big tent ethic put off some invitees who didn't want to run the risk of being rabble.
To De Tocqueville, they were "rabble".
They were rabble rousers, freaks and oddities who reveled in their idiosyncrasies.
Seventy-five per cent is rabble-rousing stuff, and isn't going to work at all.
The music, by Michael Nyman, is rabble-rousing stuff; its crescendos make Rossini's look like those of a timid beginner.
Xinhua, the official news agency, took aim at "lawless lawyers" who it claimed had been "rabble-rousing in the streets".
At the top of his game, his game being rabble-rousing, I give him all due credit.
Mr. Kerr dismissed the Free Speech Movement as "a ritual of hackneyed complaints" and suggested that its leaders, many of whom were not Berkeley students, were rabble-rousers dominated by Communists.
We must collaborate and harness our power as an articulate, emerging population block and make demands of leaders; let us be rabble-rousers for good.
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