Nassar, for example, ventured that if ordinary Iraqis had been able to hear Saddam's peroration Thursday, they would have risen up to free him.
42.
A peroration is called for drawn from World War II, evoking the memory of the crusade against a common enemy, in which more than 20 million Russians died.
43.
Lincoln used a suggestion of his secretary of state, William Seward, in developing " the mystic chords of memory " peroration to his first Inaugural address.
44.
"In this City of Angels, " he offered in a lame peroration, " we can summon the better angels of our nature ."
45.
In the final draft of FDR's war message, the student of perorations in speechwriting can see the handwriting of Harry Hopkins, the president's closest adviser.
46.
It was a barroom peroration, with Clinton _ at long last, for the eager claque of his committed haters _ as scheming, devious, sexually wanton and endlessly lawless.
47.
Although the plainer language of Atticism eventually became as belabored and ornate as the perorations it sought to replace, its original simplicity meant that it remained universally comprehensible throughout the Greek world.
48.
Kushner's elderly politicians have a tendency to keel over dead just as they're about to deliver a peroration or take the great leap forward ( literally ) into the future.
49.
Perhaps spurred on by this achievement, Knappertsbusch and the orchestra, a pickup crew gathered from orchestras all over Germany, surge into the instrumental peroration with a force nothing short of apocalyptic.
50.
Nit-pickers who winced at the redundancy of " poisonous venom " were impressed with Clinton's alliteration in his peroration to " rise above the rancor ."