blare
suomi-englanti sanakirjablare englannista suomeksi
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blare englanniksi
''Often followed by'' out: of a device such as a loudspeaker or a radio: to produce (music, a sound, etc.) loudly and piercingly.
(quote-book): Body Owner’s Handbook|edition=revised|location=London|publisher=Corporation|Scholastic Children’s Books|year=2014|page=159|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ypl8BgAAQBAJ&pg=PA159|isbn=978-1-4071-4450-4|passage=In 2000, a robber held up a bank in San Diego, USA. It seems everyone held their noses rather than sticking their hands up because the man was so smelly! (..) Police helicopters blared loudspeaker warnings about the smelly man.
(RQ:Tennyson Idylls)
(ux)
(RQ:Carlyle French Revolution)
(RQ:Tennyson Enoch Arden)
(RQ:Guardian)" by otherwise sensible journalists. Songs that have taken Europe by storm, from the gloriously bleak Belgian disco of (w)'s on danse|Alors on Danse to (w)'s soulful Désolé (Sexion d'Assaut song)|Desole blare from cars everywhere between Lisbon and Lublin but run aground as soon as they hit Dover.
To make a lengthy sound, as of a person crying or an animal bellowing or roaring.
(RQ:Coverdale Bible)
(RQ:Cowper Homer)
(RQ:Tennyson Wellington)
(RQ:Arlen Piracy)
(RQ:Wodehouse Bill the Conqueror)
(quote-book)
Of colour, light, or some other quality: dazzling, often garish, brilliance.
(RQ:Tennyson Ballads)
A lengthy sound, as of a person crying or an animal bellowing or roaring.
(RQ:Bulwer-Lytton Strange Story) One cry alone more wild than their own savage blare pierced the reek through which the Brute Hurricane swept.
(monikko) af|blaar
(alternative form of)
(infl of)