A lone protester disrupted the last of five Donald Trump rallies as Sunday turned to Monday, heckling the Republican presidential nominee with his own vulgar language from an infamous 2005 open-mic recording.

'Did you grab 'em by the p***y, Donald?' a young woman asked him from the front row of a barn at a northern Virginia fairgrounds.

And then: 'Do you respect women, Donald?'

An 11-year-old audio recording from a taping of 'Access Hollywood' gave Trump a week of bad press last month, after The Washington Post published it.

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A lone protester is seen heckling Donald Trump at a late-night rally in Leesburg, Virginia

Trump is heard in the audio hypothetically describing liberties that famous men can take with women.

'When you're a star they let you do it,' Trump laughs in the recording. 'Grab them by the p***y. You can do anything.'

The twenty-something woman who threw those words back in his face in the wee hours of Monday spoke softly, witnesses said.

Trump, arriving more than two hours late after a grueling day on the campaign trail, called her a 'very obnoxious young lady,' and plowed ahead through an energetic stump speech that he had already delivered in four states during the previous 12 hours.

'Did you grab 'em by the p***y, Donald?' a young woman asked him from the front row of a barn at a northern Virginia fairgrounds

The twenty-something woman (pictured center) who threw those words back in his face in the wee hours of Monday spoke softly, witnesses said

Trump, arriving more than two hours late after a grueling day on the campaign trail, called her a 'very obnoxious young lady'

A few thousand Trump fans shouted his name to drown her out. A second woman near the heckler argued with her, asking why so many women would have waited through an hours-long delay if he were anti-female.

Cameras clicked and video rolled in a buffer zone between the audience and the stage. In mere moments, Trump campaign staff ushered the photographers and TV camera operators out of range.

The protester, though, was never asked to leave.

The Republican nominee was in good spirits considering the lateness of both the hour and his arrival.

He took the stage at 12.21 am, calling the presidential campagn 'a marathon.'

Trump said he had another five-rally day to look forward to on Monday, the final day of campaigning before Tuesday's election.

He then plowed ahead through an energetic stump speech that he had already delivered in four states during the previous 12 hours

'What time is it?' he asked, looking at his watch.

'We'll call this the midnight special speech,' he said after he had an answer.

Trump took special aim at Virginia's governor, former Bill Clinton fundraiser and Democratic National Committee chairman Terry McAuliffe.

The Democratic governor has made a concerted effort this year to restore voting rights to a large number of criminals who have served out their sentences following felony convictions.

'Your governor has illegally given voting rights to 60,000 felons,' Trump said, claiming that McAuliffe's plan has let 'criminals cancel out the votes of law-abiding citizens.'

'You have to get everyone you know to the polls. We are going to win,' he insisted.