Synonyms for blare


Grammar : Verb
Spell : blair
Phonetic Transcription : blɛər

Top 10 synonyms for blare Other synonyms for the word blare

Définition of blare

Origin :
  • late 14c., bleren "to wail," possibly from an unrecorded Old English *blæren, or from Middle Dutch bleren "to bleat, cry, bawl, shout." Probably echoic, either way. Related: Blared; blaring. As a noun from 1809, from the verb.
  • verb make loud noise
Example sentences :
  • What signifies the blare of your brass, or the bilious bleating of your wood-wind!
  • Extract from : « Melomaniacs » by James Huneker
  • He fidgeted; tried three times—unsuccessfully—to blare defiance.
  • Extract from : « Masters of Space » by Edward Elmer Smith
  • A night of Nature's making when she is tired of noise and blare of color.
  • Extract from : « Wayside Courtships » by Hamlin Garland
  • A night of Nature's making, when she is tired of noise and blare of color.
  • Extract from : « Other Main-Travelled Roads » by Hamlin Garland
  • There were the almost deafening salutes and the blare of the band.
  • Extract from : « A Little Girl in Old Detroit » by Amanda Minnie Douglas
  • The gates were wide open, and from within came a blare of trumpets.
  • Extract from : « Orpheus in Mayfair and Other Stories and Sketches » by Maurice Baring
  • I thought she was when I saw her nearly go off at the blare of the cow.
  • Extract from : « The Trumpet-Major » by Thomas Hardy
  • She made no answer except by 'a blare with a trumpet to each discharge.'
  • Extract from : « Sir Walter Ralegh » by William Stebbing
  • Suddenly the blare of a trumpet was heard in the court below.
  • Extract from : « The Thirty Years' War » by Samuel Rawson Gardiner
  • Now, I should blare out the whole story to the first man I met; but Austin!
  • Extract from : « Wild Margaret » by Geraldine Fleming
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019