0 past simple and past participle of harangue --
1 to speak to someone or a group of people, often for a long time, in a forceful and sometimes angry way, especially to persuade them: --
Along the way they are harangued by all manner of thugs and toughs, whose costumes range from 1980s hip-hop wear to stereotypical pirates.
It is an extraordinary thing that we should now be harangued for the possibility that we may achieve the surplus and then not use it wisely.
Shall we receive complaints from our constituents about being harangued by beggars in the streets?
It is debilitating to the people who work in the offices constantly to be harangued with the monotonous, regular tones of the same message again and again.
The mob was then in a state of frenzy and was being harangued by a youth and a young woman.
They do not have to be harangued and told every year that they must have it on their agenda.
However, we are harangued and preached at because of the success of the economy.
The accusation has been made that you have been harangued.