Definitionn. a political leader who seeks support by appealing to popular passions and prejudices
Last update: June 18, 2017
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He was a demagogue of the Congress Party. [noun]
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All leaders of modern age are demagogues. [noun]
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Maley is playing the demagogue, which is a dirty trick. [noun]
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The demagogue was not fair, so the citizens ran a boycott. [Please select]
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And when a Poet or a Novelist becomes a demagogue the same applies to him. [noun]
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"You are a Republican, Sir Denzil, fostered by an arrant demagogue." [noun]
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With his wife he was overbearing; with his brother he was insolent; with his apprentice he was sullen; and with his associates at the old Falcone he played the demagogue. [noun]
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Do you know that the orange lodges agitated for repeal of the union twenty years before O'Connell did or before the prelates of your communion denounced him as a demagogue.' [noun]
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In 1832, the word bousingot formed the interim between the word jacobin, which had become obsolete, and the word demagogue which has since rendered such excellent service. [noun]
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Ask that demagogue of a Marius if he is not the slave of that little tyrant of a Cosette. [noun]
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And it is well to remember that in pleasing his public there was nothing of the hypocrite or demagogue in his make-up. [noun]
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