Verb
To declaim or rail (against some person or thing); to utter censorious and bitter language; to attack with harsh criticism or reproach, either spoken or written; to use invectives; -- with against; as, to inveigh against character, conduct, manners, customs, morals, a law, an abuse.
Source: Webster's dictionaryThe charges we bring against others often come home to ourselves; we inveigh against faults which are as much ours as theirs; and so our eloquence ends by telling against ourselves. Jerome
I do not inveigh against higher education, I simply maintain that the sort of education the colored people of the South stand most in need of, is elementary and industrial. They should be instructed for the work to be done. Timothy Thomas Fortune
he declaimed against the wasteful ways of modern society Source: Internet
Finally, one must inveigh against the tendency for Wahabi groups, largely funded from Saudi Arabia, seeking to “convert” the humanist, sufi-infused Muslims of South Asia to intolerant radical Islamists of the Taliban/jihadi variety. Source: Internet
However, even as public opinion was beginning to inveigh against the deal for allowing the Abacha family to keep 100,000,000 dollars, Hajiya Maryam, Abacha’s wife and Mohammed’s mother, came out to deny that there was ever any such deal. Source: Internet