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Discover Ludwig'lambast' is a correct word in written English.
It can be used as a verb to mean to criticize someone or something severely or harshly. For example, "The CEO lambasted the manager's decision in front of the whole team."
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Prominent pro-Europeans are planning to lambast Cameron for placing a question mark over Britain's EU membership.
If France loses export competitiveness, lambast "ultra-liberal" Eurocrats.
As Ralph Nader, erstwhile presidential candidate and America's best-known business-basher, put it, the former compassionate conservative was now the chiding conservative.Only months ago, the idea that Mr Bush would publicly lambast America's corporate bosses was laughable.
Mr Strache and Mr Haider, shut out of power, would continue to lambast the "coalition of losers" for carrying on with business as usual.
Critics lambast it for illogical subsidies, onerous regulations and vast expense.
The law has not yet been passed, and in the meantime newspapers, in particular, continue to nag the government about its poor performance and lambast it over corruption.Most important are South Africa's courts—especially the constitutional one which have long been hailed as a bulwark against the ANC's authoritarian and corrupt tendencies.
The Palestinians and Arabs already lambast Washington for being "pro-Israel" and they would view NATO as a belligerent and occupational power rather than as a peacemaker.In short, let the Israelis and the Palestinians defuse their conflict for themselves.
They may well lambast Mr Obama for expanding the federal deficit; but it is less impressive when they are unable to suggest alternatives.
Your call for an easing of planning restrictions in the south-east is a familiar refrain, much as politicians lambast civil servants or tabloids ridicule health and safety laws.
When Mr Elonis's wife left him in 2010, he turned to Facebook to lambast her under the nom de plume "Tone Dougie".
Opponents, including the veto-wielding Bush White House, lambast it as a misguided taxpayer rescue for the imprudent.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com