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scolder
noun
One who scolds.
Exact(4)
In pre-Islamic lyrics, while the speaker typically styles himself as a lover, a fighter, and a host of reckless generosity, the scolder is a voice of the communal superego, reminding the poet of his tribal duties.
The scolder is another figure from the old poetry.
Of all the services offered by Family Romance, the most perplexing to me was "Rental Scolder".
The first scolder was a "very busy, very manicured" broker, she said.
Similar(56)
His aunts have scolded him: "They said: 'Why are you here, why are you not in Europe?
If some of that scolding occurred at the interval, there was no reaction to it.
In court Tuesday, Bury scolded city attorneys for misinterpreting the order.
"Unperturbed by their lack of stature, they're more than happy to give you a scolding if you do something they don't approve of.
Richard Dawkins visited Dublin – and Listowel, in Co Kerry, for Writers' Week – and scolded the Irish for having God in their constitution; they took it on the chin, and bought his book The God Delusion at the double.
One of the elderly fish sellers on the harbourside scolds her: "Lady, you'd rather have bodies on the beaches?
If you press too hard, the lights turn red, the bristles slow down and an unhappy face scolds you on the timer.
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