Crossword clues for orate
orate
- Make public speech
- Make big speeches
- Hold court
- Go on at length
- Deliver an impassioned speech
- Address the hall, e.g
- Use the soapbox
- Spout for an audience
- Speak to one's countrymen
- Speak theatrically
- Pronounce from a podium
- Offer an address
- Make a delivery, in a way
- Give a political speech
- Give a lecture
- Give a keynote, e.g
- Give a formal speech
- Get on one's soapbox
- Deliver a stump speech
- Address Congress, say
- Address Congress
- Valedictorians do it
- Use the bully pulpit
- Use assembly language?
- Talk from the soapbox
- Talk formally
- Take to the pulpit
- Take the soapbox
- Spout from the dais
- Speak, in a way
- Speak to a large crowd
- Speak like Clay or Bryan
- Speak in the Senate
- Speak in a pompous manner
- Speak from the rostrum
- Speak from a lectern, perhaps
- Recite rhetoric
- Preach, e.g
- Offer addresses
- Mount a soap box
- Go on the stump
- Give a sermon, e.g
- Give a mighty speech
- Give a commencement address, say
- Give a big speech
- Furnish an address
- Expound at length
- Emulate a valedictorian
- Do some stumping
- Do like Demosthenes
- Deliver lectures
- Deliver from a dais
- Deliver an impassioned presentation
- Deliver a valedictory
- Deliver a keynote, e.g
- Deliver a formal speech
- Deliver a declamation
- Captivate the crowd with words
- Be eloquent, in a way
- Address the throng
- Address the hall
- Address the assembly
- Work on the stump
- Word from the Latin for "pray"
- Wax rhetoric
- Wax bombastic
- Use a lectern
- Talk with style
- Talk to the people
- Talk on the stump
- Talk big?
- Stump, maybe
- Stump the audience?
- Stand up to speak
- Stand on a soapbox
- Stand and deliver, perhaps
- Stand and deliver
- Spread wisdom as people should let me do more often
- Spout speeches
- Spout a speech
- Speak with pomposity
- Speak with pomp
- Speak with bombast
- Speak to the Senate
- Speak to an audience
- Speak pompously, perhaps
- Speak of the devil, maybe
- Speak loftily
- Speak like Martin Luther King Jr
- Speak like a senator
- Speak in Hyde Park
- Speak from the stage
- Speak from the soapbox
- Speak from the podium
- Speak from a stump
- Speak from a platform
- Speak from a balcony, perhaps
- Speak before Parliament, e.g
- Speak at the U.N., say
- Speak at commencement, say
- Speak above the crowd?
- Sound off
- Say a few words in public
- Publicly hold forth
- Provide a big address
- Present an address
- Preach, say
- Preach, perhaps
- Preach from the pulpit
- Preach from a soapbox
- Overcome glossophobia
- More than just talk
- Make use of Speakers' Corner, say
- Make speech to crowd
- Make speech
- Make like Cicero
- Make deliveries to large groups?
- Make an important delivery
- Make an extended delivery
- Make allocutions
- Make addresses
- Make a toast, say
- Make a pompous speech
- Make a long-winded speech
- Make a delivery to the masses
- Keynote, say
- Keynote, maybe
- Indulge in bombast
- Have the Senate floor, say
- Grandstand, say
- Go campaigning, in part
- Give the keynote address
- Give the keynote
- Give one's address, maybe
- Give an inaugural address
- Give a windy speech
- Give a valediction, e.g
- Give a stump speech
- Give a public address
- Give a loud speech to many
- Give a long speech
- Give a formal address
- Get a banquet going, perhaps
- Emulate Pericles
- Emulate Obama
- Emulate King
- Emulate Daniel Webster
- Emulate Clay
- Emulate a politician, in a way
- Emulate a demagogue
- Do speechmaking
- Do politicking
- Deliver the keynote address, say
- Deliver addresses
- Deliver a TED Talk, say
- Deliver a pompous speech
- Deliver a message, say
- Declaim from a podium
- Climb up on a soapbox
- Captivate a crowd with words
- Campaign, in part
- Bloviate from a podium
- Be the elocutionist
- Be all speechy
- Be a tub-thumper
- Appeal to the masses?
- Address the masses
- Address peers
- Address from a lectern
- Address an assembly
- ____ fratres
- Speak to the Senate, say
- Declaim like Demosthenes
- Address grandly
- Speechify
- Wax Websterian
- Hold forth, à la Douglas
- Speak publicly
- Emulate Pliny the Younger
- Filibuster, in a way
- Emulate Webster
- Take to the stump
- Be Bryanesque
- Magniloquize
- Emulate Cato
- Spiel
- Emulate Cicero
- Take to the soapbox
- Hold the floor
- Provide an address?
- Do some campaign work
- Give one's address?
- Give a speech
- Pontificate
- Emulate Demosthenes
- Give an address
- Spout rhetoric
- Electioneer
- Speak at length
- Use a soapbox, e.g
- Wax eloquent
- Sound off in the Senate, e.g
- Spout off on a soapbox
- Captivate the crowd, maybe
- Play to a C-Span camera
- Harangue the crowd
- Speak from a soapbox
- Give a keynote, say
- Give a stemwinder
- Preach, maybe
- Make a delivery?
- Captivate a crowd, perhaps
- Sound off, perhaps
- Elocute
- Be bombastic, perhaps
- Make an allocution
- Deliver a keynote, say
- Be on a soapbox
- Speak for the Congressional Record, say
- Speak before throngs
- Talk bombastically
- Make an impressive delivery
- Avail oneself of a rostrum
- Give a grand speech
- Stand and deliver?
- Deliver a stemwinder
- Be Ciceronian
- Make a grand speech
- Be grandiloquent
- Speak on C-Span, say
- Speak for everyone in the room?
- Speak to the masses
- Stump the crowd?
- Make grand statements
- Give out one's address?
- Tub-thump
- Speak on the stump
- Make a big speech
- Speak grandly
- Emulate Isocrates
- Get on a soapbox
- Speak to the people?
- Supply one's moving address?
- Sermonize
- Preach, e.g.
- One might do it from a soapbox
- Keynote, e.g.
- Speak like Cicero
- Speak grandiloquently
- Speak pompously, e.g
- Grandiloquize
- Emulate Henry
- Emulate W. J. Bryan
- Take to a soapbox
- Emulate Bryan
- What spellbinders do
- Take the stump
- Emulate Aeschines
- Deliver rhetoric
- Emulate Red Jacket
- Deliver encomiums
- Emulate Everett
- Mount the soapbox
- Use a podium
- Emulate Mario Cuomo
- Emulate Cuomo
- Emulate Crassus
- Emulate Stephen Douglas
- Become hortatory
- Give a keynote address, e.g
- Emulate Jesse Jackson
- Speak like Stephen Douglas
- Take the podium
- Mount a soapbox
- Spellbind
- What spread-eagleists do
- Take to the podium
- Emulate William Jennings Bryan
- Make a speech
- Preach with passion
- Give the main speech
- Become a soapboxer
- Keynote, e.g
- Spout forth
- Emulate D. Webster
- Sound off from the dais
- Speak floridly
- Deliver a spiel
- Lecture, e.g
- Make an address
- Give a long-winded talk
- What a politico loves to do
- Wax rhetorical
- Spout on July 4
- Imitate Demosthenes
- Make speech over level of tax?
- Make a formal speech
- Make a formal address
- Old scold to speak at length?
- Speak at length with enough for meeting, no question
- Nothing to like in talk
- Apparently there's no charge to make speech
- Love to take speed and talk and talk and talk!
- Hold forth with enough people there, no question
- Talk pompously
- Make speeches
- Speak one's mind
- Deliver a speech
- Address an audience
- Speak formally
- Practice public speaking
- Speak in public
- Deliver an address
- Speak bombastically
- Give a valedictory, say
- Get on the soapbox
- Emulate Lincoln
- Address a crowd
- Supply an address
- Address the public
- Address the crowd
- Take the floor
- Stand up and speak
- Give addresses
- Address a convention
- State your address?
- Speak eloquently
- Give speech
- Employ a silver tongue
- Speak with style
- Speak to crowd
- Speak from the stump
- Give a valedictory, e.g
- Address the convention
- Address crowd
- Address Congress, e.g
- Wax grandiloquent
- Speak to a crowd
- Speak one's piece
- Speak from a podium
- Speak at a podium, say
- Make the keynote address
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Wiktionary
Competent in oracy; having good speaking skills. v
1 To speak formally; to give a speech. 2 To speak passionately; to preach for or against something.
WordNet
v. talk pompously
Usage examples of "orate".
The new technology of radio had forced briskness and brevity on professional speakers, such as politicians, who were accustomed to orating on the stump for three hours at a stretch, and preachers, sometimes drilling words into their listeners at speeds that reached two hundred words a minute.
Nunc audite omnes, ite, vobis fabula narratur Nunc orate et laudate, laudat etiam Alma Mater.
As the land returned, old bastions of the technophile culture were uncovered-generally hidden underground in elab orate military complexes.
He saw himself as a ludicrous figure, acting as a pennyboy for his aunts, a nervous, well-meaning sentimentalist, orating to vulgarians and idealising his own clownish lusts, the pitiable fatuous fellow he had caught a glimpse of in the mirror.
But then they gave me a plaque commem -- orating the Incarnations series.
Wearing only knee socks and Jockey shorts, Chris Rojo was orating the history of sugar cultivation and Congressman Dilbeck's role in it.
As soon as it did, he orated over its remains, "In his declining years, old Herod fell beneath her spell!
Barry orated, "and she demanded, 'I wish for the head of John the Baptist on a silver salver!
Barry orated, "with a wife and two children, a hovercar in the garage …"
An actor in this play strode to the edge of the stage and orated directly at me, none other.
The magistrate orated, "Salina, daughter of Pleinjeanne, and Miles, son of Lige, I have given you each five years and more to find mates, and you have found none.
Great rejoicing, in the midst of which Gennaro, who seldom converses, only orates, begs everybody remember that Niccol6 is still riding under the Thurn and Taxis colors.
For one, I don’t trust anyone who orates instead of talks, the way Shar-Lon does most of the time.
His mother (nee Miss Cora Bates) is one who frequently orates upon the proper kind of food which every menu should include.
If nothing else, I figured I could keep from orating at everybody in sight.