For years I have been using the verb bloviate in reference to speaking in an overblown self-importance. |
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It is true, however, that most politicians, and those men who need to please and placate their electors, love to bloviate. |
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These talk-radio hosts lie, distort, and bloviate, and nobody calls them on it. |
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All radio talk show hosts blab and bloviate about national security, safe borders, and political accountability. |
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Once again, an army of talk radio hosts have descended on a political convention there to inform, entertain, hopefully not bloviate. |
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The speeches amazed listeners with their conversational tone and freedom from the expected pedantry, and nor did they bloviate, in the usual manner of the stump. |
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Folks at the Herald can bloviate all they want, but the truth is that a lot more people in this region buy the Globe than the Herald. |
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And not having enough sense to quit when I'm behind, I now return to the episode to bravely bloviate on. |
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Someone will come in with a rash and an attending physician will say, 'Oh, this could be arsenic poisoning,' and then bloviate for a while about it, and, of course, it's never actually arsenic poisoning. |
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The bloviators still want to bloviate about Palin's speech, which electrified the convention-centre crowd, if not necessarily the public at large. |
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