0 a line of people or vehicles that moves through a public place as a way of celebrating an occasion -- parada
a victory parade
1 to walk as a group, usually to show disagreement about something -- przemaszerować gdzieś
2 to walk somewhere so that people will see and admire you -- paradować
3 to try to make someone notice something that you are proud of, especially how rich you are or how much you know -- afiszować się z, obnosić się z
In the popular media, ' crisis' is a word that is repeated frequently as negative statistics and stereotypes are paraded.
The result was a stage, suitable for civil and military parades.
As in 1996, campaign rallies and parades were the major means of mobilising party followers and demonstrating support for political parties and presidential candidates.
The familiar failures of leadership and examples of extravagant demagoguery are paraded.
Compulsion was alien to the spirit of religion and everyone tried to get out of attending church parades.
Individual thinkers and writers are paraded and then put into the ring.
The image of youth is paraded by totalitarian regimes to extol their innovativeness in comparison with the ageing liberal world.
Events observed included life-cycle (weddings, communions), ritual-cycle (saints' days), and school events (conferences, rallies, local and statewide meetings, parades).