单词 | vociferate |
释义 | vociferatev. 1. intransitive. To shout or cry out loudly; to bawl or yell; to declaim or argue vehemently. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > cry or shout (loudness) > cry or shout [verb (intransitive)] chirmOE talec1275 rounda1325 cryc1384 shoutc1385 hallowc1420 roupa1425 glaster1513 hollo1542 yawl1542 to set up (also out) one's throat1548 vociferate1548 bawl1570 gape1579 hollo out?1602 holloa1666 to cry up1684 holler1699 halloo1709 belvea1794 parliament1893 foghorn1918 rort1931 1548 J. Veron tr. H. Bullinger Holsome Antidotus sig. I.viiv They vociferate and crye alwayes, agaynst Tythes, Tributes, Riches, Othes, Magistrates, propertie of goodes. 1598 A. M. tr. J. Guillemeau Apol. for Chirurgians in Frenche Chirurg. f. 50/2 They doe wholy neglect themselves, desiring & vociferatinge for death rather then to live soe miserablelye in dishonoure. 1672 A. Marvell Rehearsal Transpros'd ii. 270 You do so insult and vociferate upon it, like one of your bulky Princes [etc.]. 1768 Marq. Rockingham Let. 17 Dec. in G. Harris Life Ld. Hardwicke (1847) III. xvi. 427 He vociferated beyond even his usual pitch. 1824 L.-M. Hawkins Annaline II. 196 His passion was somewhat exhausted and he ceased to vociferate. 1856 E. K. Kane Arctic Explor. I. xvii. 202 They were vociferating as if to attract our attention. 1959 P. O'Brian Unknown Shore ii. 45 Tobias was obliged to be dragged away, foaming and vociferating to the last. 2012 North West Star (Austral.) (Nexis) 18 June 6 There will be those who would prefer to sit back and do nothing apart from vociferate about what is wrong with the idea. 2. transitive. To utter in a loud voice; to shout loudly; to declaim or assert vehemently. a. With direct or indirect speech as object. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > cry or shout (loudness) > cry or shout [verb (transitive)] remeOE shoutc1374 hallow?a1400 shout?a1513 roup1513 bemea1522 yawl1542 toot1582 gawl1592 yellow1594 hollo1597 vociferate1599 bawl1600 halloo1602 acclaim1659 foghorn1886 honk1906 belt1971 1599 T. Nashe Lenten Stuffe 37 The Essex calfe or lagman..very lamentably vociferated veale, veale, veale. 1633 L. Anderton Non-entity of Protestancy xix. 222 The Protestants doe in their pulpits and els where with great clamour and noyse vociferate, and cry out, that the Pope is Antichrist. 1661 W. Nicholson Εκθεσις Πιστεως 218 Without any regard of modesty, law, equity, or justice, in a tumultuous and insulting manner they all vociferate, Art thou the Son of God? Thou? 1748 S. Richardson Clarissa VI. xxx. 99 Damn'd, damn'd doings! vociferated the Peer. 1816 W. Scott Old Mortality ii, in Tales of my Landlord 1st Ser. IV. 45 They vociferated loudly, that those who were not with them were against them. 1871 E. C. G. Murray Member for Paris I. 233 ‘You shall apologize,’ vociferated the Bench. 1956 A. L. Rowse Diaries 14 Oct. (2003) 259 Sir Charles vociferated passionately, ‘How an historian like him who based himself on the French Revolution can have no understanding of the Russian Revolution beats me.’ 2009 K. R. Jones & J. Wills Amer. West i. iv. 111 Bush vociferated with a smirk, ‘If you read the papers, you know that when some want to criticize me they call me a cowboy.’ b. With a noun or noun phrase as object. ΚΠ 1642 E. Browne Potent Vindic. Book-making 5 A man in a pulpit may imagine he hath a Spirit of Revelation, which he hath not, and therefore sometime in an absurd extasie of zeale may vociferate and babble hee knowes not what himselfe. 1704 Prelacy Defended 7 You have spoke Blasphemy, vociferated rapturistick Absurdities, and irreconcilable Contradictions. 1782 V. Knox Ess. (new ed.) I. lxxxi. 358 The ignorant plebeian, though he may vociferate the word Liberty in a riot, knows not how to give it an effectual support. 1847 E. Brontë Wuthering Heights I. ix. 162 He entered, vociferating oaths dreadful to hear. 1860 F. Winslow Obscure Dis. Brain & Mind iv. 53 I then began to vociferate a number of most incoherent expressions. 1928 A. Huxley Point Counter Point xi. 168 Blond, beef-red, with green and bulging eyes, his large face shining, he approached vociferating greetings. 2010 S. Zimmerman Food in Movies (ed. 2) iii. 118 The repressed members of this family vociferate the unvarnished truth about each other. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > cry or shout (loudness) > cry or shout [verb (transitive)] > incite or pursue with shout hallowc1369 hoyc1536 whoop1582 hue1590 hollo away?1602 vociferate1794 to bellow off1837 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going away > causing to go away > command to go away [verb (transitive)] > drive away > by various types of noise hoot1393 hiss1519 hollo away?1602 vociferate1794 trumpet1795 bark1829 1794 W. P. Carey Appeal to People of Ireland 44 Is he a friend to a persecuted Printer? Vociferate him into silence! 1880 Daily Tel. 9 Apr. It would be worse than disappointing..if Lord Beaconsfield should have been vociferated out of office merely in order to please Montenegro and Bulgaria. 1899 Catholic World Nov. 154 Church Defence Societies are springing up all over England, with Kensit and Harcourt to vociferate them into anti-Roman passion. Derivatives voˈciferated adj. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > cry or shout (loudness) > [adjective] > shouted vociferated1776 shouted1870 1776 B. Simonds Treat. Field Diversions 57 Notwithstanding the vociferated Zeal of such trusty Fellows, I have known a new Set of Muscles purchased for five Shillings. 1899 Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Mar. 516/2 Then, dripping like a Newfoundland, I would return to the house and decline to change my dress or shoes, in the vociferated hope of immediate death from consumption. 1992 Faith-life July 11/1 Concordia Seminary Prof. Dr. Edward Preus defects to Roman Church: overnight reversal of his vociferated conviction of Justification by Faith. voˈciferating adj. and n. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > cry or shout (loudness) > [adjective] > shouting belching1581 shouting1601 bawling1603 vociferant1609 vociferous?1611 vociferatinga1625 obstropolous1748 slogan-shouting1940 the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > voice or vocal sound > cry or shout (loudness) > [noun] > crying or shouting cryc1380 reer?a1400 steveningc1440 vociferation1528 yowling1528 luring1547 holloing1600 bawling1629 vociferating1729 hallalloo1737 yo-yoing1836 vociferance1838 a1625 J. Fletcher Mad Lover ii. ii, in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. (1647) sig. B4v/1 Beefe we can beare before us..And tubs of Porke; vociferating Veales. 1687 P. Pett Obligation from Oath of Supremacy 122 On Fryar Adrian's vociferating there about the Pope's dispensing being an Arbitrary favour, Verdune the famous French Divine took him down with saying, that it is a fond Perswasion that Dispensing is a mere favour. 1729 A. Pope Dunciad (new ed.) ii. (Argt.) 28 Afterwards the exercises for the Poets, of Tickling, Vociferating, Diving. 1868 Sabbath at Home Sept. 542/1 The sound of music,..the vociferating of criers, and the singing of dancing girls, immodestly attired, is heard and seen on every side. 1992 Guardian Weekly (Nexis) 16 Feb. 10 There were no furtive black-market currency dealers, no vociferating religious proselytisers, and no hawkers. 2002 Irish News (Nexis) 4 July 19 His vociferating on the euro and other salient issues concerning the Northern Ireland economy—which won him bouquets and brickbats in equal measure—hasn't gone away. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2018; most recently modified version published online December 2021). < v.1548 |
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