Screed in a sentence as a noun

"NO, WE ARE NOT" followed by a screed that goes to prove you are _exactly_ that.

The rest was a screed on the generic problem.

This whole comment comes off as a sociopathic and mildly paranoid screed.

If I ever read another long, rambling screed about the failings of millennials, it will be too soon.

The article is interesting precisely because it is not just another "NoSQL sucks" screed.

I'll take this over an anonymous, half-informed screed any day.

Thankfully people seem to have learned from this and you don't often end up dumped, contextless into the middle of some domain-specific screed any more.

Joel Spolsky's illuminating screed on Netscape rewriting its browser from scratch is apropos here: The idea that new code is better than old is patently absurd.

Hidden inside this fascinating screed is an announcement about the "Google Grok" project, which appears to be something of an Eclipse-killer for dynamic languages.

Non-executive workers have little or no negotiating power over their terms of employment, and the greater the asymmetry the less of a free economic choice it is. Obviously he's not that happy about it or he wouldn't have written this screed.

I haven't yet finished reading his screed, but so far it sounds to me like he is not only not asking for help, he is openly rejecting it, in which case I doubt anybody else should have much to say about it.

Screed definitions

noun

a long monotonous harangue

noun

a long piece of writing

noun

an accurately levelled strip of material placed on a wall or floor as guide for the even application of plaster or concrete