Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

(verb) to utter or send out with denunciation / (verb) to send forth censures or invectives / (verb) express vehement protest

Highlighted phrases

fulminated
fulminates
fulminate
fulminating



the adherents of a philosophy which has since degenerated into a mere ideological sport, fulminate in pre-1933 fashion against artistic distortion

—p.189 Commitment (177) by Theodor W. Adorno
notable
6 years, 5 months ago


pissing on some long-ago third rail and fulminated to charcoal

—p.615 by Thomas Pynchon
strange
1 year, 3 months ago


Alice still continued fulminating, becoming a Marxist right around ’91

—p.51 by Benjamin Kunkel
notable
8 months, 1 week ago


Her eyes sifted among the crowd inevitably toward his own, which Aziz imagined fulminating like stars, and broke there, resting on him very lightly

—p.456 by Jennifer Egan
notable
2 years, 2 months ago


It seemed to her suddenly that little flame-colored globes were exploding in the air like fulminating bullets

—p.278 Part III (203) by Gustave Flaubert
notable
2 years, 3 months ago


That evening, Gapon, his world view shattered, ‘red hot’, Krupskaya will recall, ‘from the breath of the revolution’, fulminates to a crowd of survivors: ‘We have no Tsar!’

on Bloody Sunday (Jan 9, 1905)

—p.19 The Prehistory of 1917 (5) by China Miéville
notable
6 years, 6 months ago


Fulminating like this, talking under his breath, Mitchell found himself at the Seine

—p.159 by Jeffrey Eugenides
notable
2 months ago


Just before the final pardon, Tito himself fulminates the proliferation of treasons that obliges him to proliferate acts of clemency

—p.47 Diagnosis (17) by Slavoj Žižek
notable
6 years, 7 months ago


The new light disorients, the fulminating nature overwhelms, and the air, dense with pollen, bothers my eyes

—p.14 by Jhumpa Lahiri
notable
2 years, 7 months ago


They could fulminate against upper-class parasites and the idle rich in ways which could be mistaken by the politically unwary as genuinely radical.

—p.206 Chapter Nine (196) by Terry Eagleton
notable
6 years, 6 months ago