Lambaste vs Trackback - What's the difference?
lambaste | trackback |
To scold, reprimand or criticize harshly.
* 2013 , Paul Harris, Lance Armstrong faces multi-million dollar legal challenges after confession'' (in ''The Guardian , 19 January 2013)[http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2013/jan/19/lance-armstrong-legal-challenges-confession]
(dated) To give a thrashing to; to beat severely.
(software, Internet, blogging) A protocol for a system that allows a blogger to see who has seen the original post and has written another entry concerning it.
As a verb lambaste
is to scold, reprimand or criticize harshly.As a noun trackback is
(uncountable|computing) a method to keep track of links to content, especially blog entries.lambaste
English
Alternative forms
* lambast (UK)Verb
(lambast)- The sergeant lambasted the new recruits daily.
- Her first novel was well and truly lambasted by the critics.
- Indeed, part of the problem was that Armstrong was rowing back on so much previous behaviour and years of aggressive lambasting of reporters, officials and team-mates who had claimed he was doping. "I don't forgive Lance Armstrong, who lied to me in two interviews. And I suspect most of America won't, either," Kurtz wrote.
