tirade \ˈtī-ˌrād \ noun A long, angry speech full of harsh language, a rant. From Old French tirade, a shot.

Using the dictionary entry, which sentence uses tirade correctly?

A.
Yamile was usually shy and quiet, so everyone was shocked by her sudden tirade against bullying.
B.
Henderson tried to tirade about rights and freedom all through lunch, never giving anyone else a chance to speak.
C.
When her street flooded yet again, Gail muttered angrily as she waded knee-deep into the tirade.
D.
After their fight, Ramona and Hayley finally had a quiet, peaceful tirade to discuss their differences.

Respuesta :

Answer:

I would say A

Explanation:

B) In this example, tirade is being used as a verb, whereas the definition says it is a noun.

C) This one is a bit confusion, because how can someone wade into a rant, so this one isn't right either

D) While this one uses the word tirade for a speech, a tirade is angry and harsh, not quiet and peaceful.

Therefore, the answer is A. Hope this helps!

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