Get to know Russiagate better with 10+ real example sentences, the meaning.
Russiagate in a sentence
Russiagate meaning
- A scandal in the late 1990s in which billions of dollars were laundered out of Russia by the bureaucracy of president Boris Yeltsin with the assistance of Western banks such as the Bank of New York.
- The controversy and Russia investigation that ensued after the US presidential election in 2016 regarding the discovery of myriad secretive links between Trump associates and Russian officials.
Using Russiagate
- The main meaning on this page is: A scandal in the late 1990s in which billions of dollars were laundered out of Russia by the bureaucracy of president Boris Yeltsin with the assistance of Western banks such as the Bank of New York. | The controversy and Russia investigation that ensued after the US presidential election in 2016 regarding the discovery of myriad secretive links between Trump associates and Russian officials.
- In the example corpus, russiagate often appears in combinations such as: the russiagate, of russiagate, russiagate has.
Context around Russiagate
- Average sentence length in these examples: 24.4 words
- Position in the sentence: 2 start, 12 middle, 6 end
- Sentence types: 20 statements, 0 questions, 0 exclamations
Corpus analysis for Russiagate
- In this selection, "russiagate" usually appears in the middle of the sentence. The average example has 24.4 words, and this corpus slice is mostly made up of statements.
- Around the word, entire, promoted, moscow, nonsense, story and witch stand out and add context to how "russiagate" is used.
- Recognizable usage signals include 2019 about russiagate and against moscow russiagate remains like. That gives this page its own corpus information beyond isolated example sentences.
- By corpus frequency, "russiagate" sits close to words such as abdulkadir, abed and abhay, which helps place it inside the broader word index.
Example types with russiagate
The same corpus examples are grouped by length and sentence type, making it easier to see the contexts in which the word appears:
Reviewing “Ball of Collusion”, the big book of 2019 about RussiaGate. (11 words)
I have written 37 posts about RussiaGate since the first in July 2016. (13 words)
The Russiagate story has made some strange bedfellows of journalists both left and right. (14 words)
But a few liberal journalists are calling on their colleagues to recognize that Russiagate was just a symptom of TDS and that the only cure for the latter is a return to the business of reporting the actual news. (39 words)
And with the mainstream media proving again that it’s as invested in the Russiagate story as it has ever been, ABC News reported that it was the Russians who were also trying to portray Biden as senile. (38 words)
A society in which two of the biggest overarching political narratives are as ridiculous as Q-Anon and Russiagate has no business dismissing the obvious conspiracy and collusion involved in promulgating an exaggerated and manufactured pandemic. (36 words)
Example sentences (20)
After all, the entire RussiaGate witch-hunt ending in the Mueller nothing-burger wasn’t even remotely a legitimate exercise in law enforcement.
A society in which two of the biggest overarching political narratives are as ridiculous as Q-Anon and Russiagate has no business dismissing the obvious conspiracy and collusion involved in promulgating an exaggerated and manufactured pandemic.
While this was being written, Portside reposted an hysterical, crude of the RussiaGate nonsense and related conspiratorial gibberish by radio host and spiritualist, Thom Hartmann.
But there was a level of independence that is completely gone now and you see that in its parroting of Russiagate propaganda, in its parroting of propaganda about Ukraine, and its extreme parroting of Israeli propaganda.
The same mob that ignored the evidence about child sex trafficking of Epstein and Co. The same mob that promoted Russiagate.
This narrative being pedaled was likely concocted by the same kind of Democratic strategists who had people believing the Kremlin deliberately impacted Trump being elected in 2016 with the Russiagate nonsense.
With new U.S. action today against Moscow, Russiagate remains like a vampire, with no one able to drive a wooden stake into its heart and keep it there.
And with the mainstream media proving again that it’s as invested in the Russiagate story as it has ever been, ABC News reported that it was the Russians who were also trying to portray Biden as senile.
Given that some of our friends on JT swallowed the Democrat nonsense about Russiagate suggests they're not as immune to conspiracy theories as they might think.
The Russiagate story has made some strange bedfellows of journalists both left and right.
Worse still for the LSM and other Russiagate diehards, Mueller’s findings last year enabled Trump to shout “No Collusion” with Russia.
Assume for argument’s sake that Trump was holding up aid to get Zelensky to investigate Crowdstrike, possible initiation of Russiagate, and the Bidens.
But a few liberal journalists are calling on their colleagues to recognize that Russiagate was just a symptom of TDS and that the only cure for the latter is a return to the business of reporting the actual news.
Certainly there still would have been a Russiagate probe of Moscow’s activities during the campaign.
I have written 37 posts about RussiaGate since the first in July 2016.
I'll briefly try to tie them up before proceeding to my Russiagate-damning conclusion.
Indeed, the primary critics of Russiagate quoted above can be safely described as leftwing.
In light of … more recent developments, they’re apt to have a conversation instead about whether media sensationalism is hurting the search for truth in Russiagate.
It’s why the British deep state and intelligence community was so eager to help Hillary Clinton fabricate the Russiagate controversy through the creation of the Steele Dossier.
Reviewing “Ball of Collusion”, the big book of 2019 about RussiaGate.
Common combinations with russiagate
These word pairs occur most frequently in English texts: