The word
"claque" refers to a group of people who are hired to applaud or cheer loudly in order to show support or approval, especially at a performance or public event.
Full definition
Daniel Joseph Martinez, Museum Tags: Second Movement (overture); or, Overture
con Claque (Overture with Hired Audience Members), 1993, for the 1993 Whitney Biennial.
The book is excitedly cheered by the
usual claque, including Karen Armstrong (A History of God), Elisabeth Shussler Fiorenza of Harvard, and, to be sure, Bishop John Spong.
It is a time of candor when thoughtful people who do not have a racist bone in their body are exposing the lies of a civil rights establishment and its
liberal claque that have no legitimate claim on the luminous moment that was the civil rights movement of Dr. King.
Le speed dating - Têtes
à claques - Duration: speed dating 2 com: Play free online girl games includes dress up, makeover, barbie, decorating games and much more.
And the teachers
union claque did just that, expressing outrage — outrage at the magazine in particular and at «outsiders» in general.
At the risk of sounding like the Palm Beach Daily News» Shiny Sheet, I can report that every table was seated with a
different claque.
Daniel Martinez, Museum Tags: Second Movement (overture) or Overture
con claque - Overture with Hired Audience Members (1993)
A forward misses a shot, and
the claque begins again.
Mr Rees - Mogg is more than a possible leadership contender: he and
his claques are in contention for the soul...
His contribution included a piece that had another of what I now realize are his typically cumbersome (and partly self - contradictory) titles: Museum Tags: Second Movement (Overture); or, Overture Con
Claque (Overture With Hired Audience Members).
Hausfraus — it was shopping time — turned away, moved away, and this Moses parting the bourgeois sea, not acknowledging
his claque, which kept up the chant, sauntered free.