ranter - translation to spanish
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ranter - translation to spanish

17TH-CENTURY ENGLISH RELIGIOUS MOVEMENT
RANTER; Ranters (religious movement); Ranter

ranter         
fanfarrón
orador populachero
ranting         
  • A street protester delivers a harangue in front of the National Assembly in Paris, France, in 2006.
LITERARY GENRE
Rants; Ranting; Diatribes; Rant; Draft:Diatribe
lenguaje vociferante
rant         
  • A street protester delivers a harangue in front of the National Assembly in Paris, France, in 2006.
LITERARY GENRE
Rants; Ranting; Diatribes; Rant; Draft:Diatribe
vociferar
despotricar

Definition

Ranter
·noun A noisy talker; a raving declaimer.
II. Ranter ·noun One of a religious sect which sprung up in 1645;
- called also Seekers. ·see Seeker.
III. Ranter ·noun One of the Primitive Methodists, who seceded from the Wesleyan Methodists on the ground of their deficiency in fervor and zeal;
- so called in contempt.

Wikipedia

Ranters

The Ranters were one of a number of dissenting groups that emerged around the time of the Commonwealth of England (1649–1660). They were largely common people, and the movement was widespread throughout England, though they were not organised and had no leader.

Examples of use of ranter
1. Article continues But Mad Mel Phillips, the Daily Mail‘s ranter–in–chief, has, it seems, identified a dire yet hitherto ignored new threat to our great nation.
2. Mad Mel Phillips, the Daily Mail‘s ranter–in–chief, says in a typically temperate post on her blog that the positive response to young Dave Fotherington–Cameron‘s recent anti–neocon foreign policy speech from the "profoundly anti–Jew, anti–Israel, simply vile" Muslim Public Affairs Committee is proof positive of the "moral and intellectual decline" of the present–day Conservative party.
3. His views are extreme, they‘re not based in fact, and he‘s a ranter." Of the overall Obama team, Ebell said, "They will pursue an anti–energy agenda that is designed to constrict energy supplies and raise energy prices." Lubchenco did not draw the same level of criticism from conservative groups as Holdren yesterday, but she represents just as radical a departure for NOAA, which oversees marine issues as well as much of the government‘s climate work.
4. A most encouraging early postbag in our exciting new Name a Great British Ambassador, Win a Bottle of Crap Perfume contest (see previous Diaries). We do like George Galloway for Washington, Tony Blair for Baghdad, Ian Paisley for the Holy See and the Daily Mail‘s ranter–in–chief, Mad Mel Phillips, for Syria, though at present the nod tends tentatively towards Jeremy Clarkson for Sark.
5. Sure, it‘s great if you‘re in the business, and happen to know that Heffer is a savage send–up of little Englandism penned by my old friend Yasmin Alibhai–Brown, who‘s also responsible – sorry, but it‘s time the public were let in on the media in–joke – for the Sun‘s regular ranter "Jon Gaunt". Which reminds me to congratulate Yasmin/Jon for this week‘s piece on SUVs, which ended with this tribute to democracy: "You can earn money then SPEND IT ON WHAT YOU WANT." Genius.