1. declaiming - Noun
2. declaiming - Verb
of Declaim
Source: Webster's dictionaryAs a boy I was very solitary but blissfully happy. We lived on the edge of town in Wexford and I wandered the fields with my dog, declaiming Keats to the trees. John Banville
There is too much knowledge already in the world; we use facts as crutches, to the impoverishment of our senses. Facts are falsehoods; logic is deceit. I know a single system of communication: the declaiming of poetry. Jack Vance
Your quicksilver declaiming eye Had frozen to the stare of a straight line Which only saw goals painted in its beam And made an artificial darkness all around Which thickened into Allies. Stephen Spender
It would be awesome to be so impressive that we could sway people to our way of thinking just by declaiming our thoughts, but probably most of us lack such gravitas. Luckily, there's something even better: evidence, logic, and argument. Barry Eisler
Pat mentioned that Charles Dickens coined a word, “ponging,” to mean declaiming theatrically. Source: Internet
He went around declaiming politely, 'Down with the Mediterranean.' Source: Internet