English » Portuguese

harassment [həˈræsmənt, Brit ˈhærəs-] N no pl

harass [həˈræs, Brit ˈhærəs] VB trans

I . harbor [ˈhɑːrbər] Am, Aus, harbour [Brit ˈhɑːbəʳ] N

II . harbor [ˈhɑːrbər] Am, Aus, harbour [Brit ˈhɑːbəʳ] VB trans

1. harbor doubts, resentment, suspicion:

2. harbor refugee:

I . harness [ˈhɑːrnɪs, Brit ˈhɑːn-] N

II . harness [ˈhɑːrnɪs, Brit ˈhɑːn-] VB trans

hardness N no pl

hardware N no pl

1. hardware (household articles):

2. hardware COMPUT:

harmonious [hɑːrˈmoʊniəs, Brit hɑːˈməʊ-] ADJ

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Campaign sound-trucks wove their way through urban and rural streets, often bombarding residents with earsplitting harangues from candidates or their supporters.
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After haranguing the crowd for their lewdness, the knight is pelted with rotten eggs and chased away.
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Although hit and incapacitated, he continued to harangue his men forward.
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Time was spent in harangues and theological disputes.
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Waters also stated that it is improbable that a fugitive from justice would openly harangue the public from a high ledge.
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There he endured incessant propaganda harangues in between long stretches of hard labor in the iron mines.
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It's one thing to sit on the side and harangue and pontificate.
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The latter in his harangue appealed to glory, wealth and the oath they had all taken.
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They always harangue strangers with their infeasible solutions and politicize normal conversation with their favored issues.
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Outside the palisade, in the field an older warrior had been seen haranguing younger warriors, and leading them in mock skirmishes and military exercises.
en.wikipedia.org

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