How To Use Aloud In A Sentence

  • We sat in aw as we listened to Hillary's speech and wondered aloud what she's up too. POLITICAL HOT TOPICS: Wednesday, June 2, 2008
  • I used to read it aloud to my little brother, and we'd collapse into helpless laughter.
  • He spoke aloud to the empty room, “Cara, is everything ready?” 365 tomorrows » 2010 » February : A New Free Flash Fiction SciFi Story Every Day
  • She swallowed a humph, then nearly groaned aloud when, clapping her hands, Lady Hightham urged them to gather around for some music. ON A WICKED DAWN
  • The teacher asked the students to read the text aloud after class.
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  • Here the interior is inlaid with millions of beautiful shells, scallops, paloudres, clams, periwinkles, mussels, oysters and rogans.
  • He almost laughed aloud when she mentioned his bewitching her into sleep.
  • The most embarrassing moment to realize that there is a tongue-twister in the prayer is when you say it aloud for the first time in worship, and the whole congregation snickers.
  • Eager hints would become rhapsodic proclamations; backstairs whispers would be babbled aloud in the corridors of the complex.
  • Then such a wave of despair and anguish overwhelmed him, the irrevocableness and implacability of fate so smote him, that he lifted up his head and howled aloud. Flush: a biography
  • Reading your writing aloud will also help you to identify any weak spots. The Sun
  • Yet I know that many poets see a double-space as a framing device for how the work looks on the page, with no significance intended for how the poem sounds when read aloud or when vocalized internally. Sheryda Warrener reads Karen Solie
  • All at once she laughed aloud. A Time of War
  • Our pleasant duties over, we looked into the cheerful glow of the turf sods while I read aloud Thackeray's Peg of Limavady. Penelope's Irish Experiences
  • Every day, he got up early and read tongue-twisters aloud to improve his diction and develop his facial muscles.
  • After the break, we took turns getting up in front of the class to read something aloud.
  • Aghazal played the cithara and sang all the lovely longing thoughts Akantha dared not speak aloud, and Adalana, with her flute, was an impertinent skylark who served as a go-between. Wildfire
  • For her father's comfort, noting the sad wistful eyes that watched her coming in and going out, she had resigned herself to spend long melancholy hours within doors, reading aloud till Sir John fell asleep, playing backgammon -- a game she detested worse even than shove-halfpenny, which latter primitive game they played sometimes on the shovel-board in the hall. London Pride Or When the World Was Younger
  • Miranda was weeping aloud with the infant in her arms, as was Alannis standing beside her young lord.
  • It has grown out of a family habit of telling stories and reading aloud at bedtime.
  • To read Proulx aloud your mouth needs plenty of spit in it.
  • She opens the book at a random page and starts reading aloud.
  • Please read this passage aloud, Jennifer.
  • It is as if, in the midnoon of a god-given day of golden spring, they should hug a black umbrella down about their heads and cry aloud, "Behold, there is no sun! The Theory of the Theatre
  • In addition, the model provides no account of how pronounceable non-words are read aloud, nor of how context influences word identification.
  • He is the perfect example of a teenager that is all but screaming aloud for help.
  • He whispered her name aloud in the dark room, and closed his eyes, trying to imagine what the rest of his life would be without her in it. Voices Carry
  • Florent Malouda scored the winner on Saturday but he is as happy veering infield as dumbfounding markers on the outside. Chelsea manager shrugs off heckles and looks to rectify familiar faults
  • He reads it aloud, "During a routine examination of the relevant State of Alaska Department of Natural Resources Case File, it appears that you will need financial assistance in displacement costs relative to locating a new site. Jeanne Devon ("AKMuckraker"): Chuitna and the Curse of Coal
  • They wrote essays, or lectures, or sermons and they read them aloud.
  • I wondered aloud to her how she managed to make people angry with her. Know Your Own Mind
  • I used to read it aloud to my little brother, and we'd collapse into helpless laughter.
  • Adrina had to bite her lip to prevent herself laughing aloud. TREASON KEEP
  • And now they both broke down and sobbed aloud without a pause, like birds bereaved, like the sea eagle or taloned vulture, when villages have robbed the nests of their unfledged young.
  • Through this method you stimulate the person to look at things afresh and to think aloud.
  • When it comes to movie theater etiquette, texting is the new talking aloud, but just as rude. Joel Schwartzberg: Who Thinks It's Okay to Text & Tweet During Movies?
  • He flicked the horse dubitatively, and turned his head, first to Robert, next to Rhoda; and then he chuckled aloud: Rhoda Fleming — Complete
  • It was like a million sharp needles were piercing my skin, and I began to scream aloud.
  • Aloud yell from back in the trees almost made her falter.
  • Big Butch Brewster, to whom the billet-doux was addressed in T. Haviland Hicks, Jr.'s, familiar scrawl, tore open the envelope, and while the squad listened, he read aloud the message left by that sunny-souled youth; "DEAR BUTCH: "Coach Corridan will have to use the alarm clock from now on! I'm called away on business. See that my stuff gets to Bannister O.K. Stow it in the room next to yours. I'll be back at college some time in the next century. Give my adieux to Coach Corridan and the squad. T. Haviland Hicks Senior
  • The situation cries aloud for strong, even dramatic, and also attention-winning, arguments.
  • David Davis moves the old folk tale "Stone Soup" to the American Southwest for "Fandango Stew" Sterling, 32 pages, $14.95 , a boisterous picture book full of Wild West lingo that pretty much demands to be read aloud with Tex-Mex emphasis on the diphthongs. When Imagination Blasts Into Orbit
  • The thesis analyzes word stress, sentence stress and rhythm to obtain revelation to English read-aloud.
  • It was Arab feminists who insisted on speaking aloud the oldest truths, bringing upon themselves the most ferocious repressions.
  • The Abbot's Apparitor drew forth his roll and read aloud: -- 'Sir Robert de Shurland, Knight banneret, Baron of Shurland and Minster, and Lord of Sheppey. Half-Hours with Great Story-Tellers
  • [Illustration: "A Solemn Gentleman, with a troublesome cough, reading aloud to his Wife."] _Miss P. _ (_standing opposite "The Flight into Egypt" reading_). Punch, Or The London Charivari, Volume 102, January 16, 1892
  • When Carlyle, in the strength of his reaction against morbid introspective Byronism, cried aloud to all men in their several vocation, '_Produce, produce; be it but the infinitesimallest product, produce_,' he meant to include production as an element inside the art of living, and an indispensable part and parcel of it. Critical Miscellanies (Vol. 3 of 3) Essay 5: On Pattison's Memoirs
  • [T] his engaging read, or read-aloud, is" joust "the ticket for all young fans of non-gender-specific knightly valor. Igraine The Brave by Cornelia Funke: Book summary
  • As she said her name aloud, a bolt of lightening hurtled towards the earth and struck it with a loud boom.
  • Some groan and cry aloud. Times, Sunday Times
  • Both will respond to activities such as poetry read aloud, choral readings with repetitious phrasing, and intentional changes of voice.
  • He laughed out loud at his own joke. Aloud has the same meaning but is fairly formal. It can also mean 'in a loud voice'.
  • Joanne, would you read the poem aloud?
  • Fu rewinds the tape, and as he replays it, he reads aloud Zhao's letter to her.
  • Sing or read aloud, exaggerating your lip movements.
  • This certainly is a laugh aloud book, and I found myself alternating between muffled chuckles and outright guffaws.
  • a psalm from the dear old Scottish paraphrase, with its primitive inversion of the simple perfect Bible words; and a kind of precentor stood up, and, having sounded the note on a pitch-pipe, sang a couple of lines by way of indicating the tune; then all the congregation stood up, and sang aloud, Mr Bradshaw's great bass voice being half Ruth
  • Failure to feature substantive disarmament prominently in the Iran nuclear debate virtually guarantees that Gewen's wondering aloud about security guarantees and nuclear umbrella is the best-case scenario. Russ Wellen: Would Sweeping Disarmament on Our Part Impress Iran?
  • She did not speak this thought aloud; but it haunted her; and, as the evening wore eventlessly away, the question escaped her in spite of herself: “Can you have offended them? Ultima Thule
  • It was some time since Jerry had spoken a word of German, but as she stood before Gretchen's picture old memories seemed to revive, and with them the German word for _pretty_, which she involuntarily spoke aloud. Tracy Park
  • Old fogey: Carline, ah, how to begin to read aloud again case old?
  • His voice was clear and pronounced, as though he were used to reading such things aloud.
  • While it is the sheer physicality of Mr. Hurt's performance that impresses most—he totters about the stage with the squeaky-shoed grace of the music-hall clowns that Beckett loved—you will be no less stunned by the sound of his creaky, rusty voice, which suggests a hermit who never has occasion to speak a word aloud for months at a time. The End Of the Line
  • Girls Aloud, however, are demonstrating a longevity almost unheard of in their genre.
  • Prue entered the passage in her notebook, then read it aloud again.
  • A skua, going by the general size and shape, knocked the smallest human down and Clea laughed aloud. T2©: RISING STORM
  • When I had realized that I had voiced my thought aloud, I turned a helpless shade of cherry red and smiled sheepishly.
  • Some groan and cry aloud. Times, Sunday Times
  • A child from a Christian home can be put in an embarrassing situation if asked to read aloud a passage including swear words and blasphemy.
  • Moved out of herself by the nearness of death, the titled dame had reverted to childish days, speaking her thoughts aloud. All Aboard A Story for Girls
  • She wanted to laugh aloud at the prospect of the delight she would give.
  • They seemed to be conferring amongst themselves, even though they didn't speak aloud.
  • Audiences that are breathless during the sensual desert tryst between Jen and her bandit lover Lo (Chang), later sob their farewells aloud to an old warrior who gives a lovely valediction.
  • She didn't just show it to her, she ended up reading it all aloud and was rewarded with the first real chuckle we've had from her for weeks.
  • He performs his poems and children join in, writing their own poetry or reading his aloud.
  • Indeed, it was a common thing then, in places where friend met friend, for one that had a voice to read somewhat aloud for the delectation of the others, whether a pleasant tale in prose or a poetic canzonet. The God of Love
  • Recently, I wondered aloud about the seemingly substantial number of Great Writers who suffered brothel-related misadventures/trauma in pubescence.
  • The rhyme and rhythm of Alborough's duck tales, with their bold, easy-to-follow images, make them ideal for reading aloud.
  • When this pleasurable sensation rises into a painful one, and the customs of society will not permit us to laugh aloud, some other violent voluntary exertion is used instead of it to alleviate the pain. Canto II
  • Some children told lies as they fantasized about what they had, living aloud their day-dreams.
  • Many wondered aloud if his career, and previously unimpeachable reputation, could recover. Times, Sunday Times
  • Some of the dialogue is a little stilted, and is the stuff that looks great on paper but rings odd when spoken aloud. Review: Majestic XII: Top Secret/For Majic Eyes Only #1 | Major Spoilers - Comic Book Reviews and News
  • This is meant to be read aloud with some drama and fun even if you're not an actor.
  • If granted time, politicians need to loosen their dreary discipline and think aloud. Times, Sunday Times
  • Some were crying, some laughing aloud some groaning and howling and some holding forth in fancied exhortations. The Hidden Hand
  • Please read the following sentences aloud.
  • As this player counts aloud from one to ten, the other children are given a bell.
  • They came over to look over her shoulder as she read the scroll aloud, unrolling it.
  • Say that sentence aloud. Times, Sunday Times
  • Children can click on a sentence to hear it read aloud.
  • My fourth graders, for instance, sketched with David in assemblies and in more intimate settings, but they also used their sketchbooks on their own, say while listening to me read aloud, filling them up with ideas and drawings of all kinds. Monica Edinger: What is David Macaulay Up To?
  • Please read the following sentences aloud.
  • She groaned aloud in pleasure when his kisses continued down to the swell of her bosom.
  • He remembered the menacing phone-calls to Nicola and wondered aloud whether some one from a drugs syndicate had been trying to scare her.
  • Unlike most books, children's books have to read well aloud, and Pooh is a delight to read aloud.
  • Wulfgar threw back his head and laughed aloud. THE WOLF AND THE DOVE
  • Both Captain and Mrs. Caldwell protested strongly against what they called cant; and they seemed to have called everything cant except an occasional cold reading aloud of the Bible on Sundays, and the bald observance of the church service. The Beth Book Being a Study of the Life of Elizabeth Caldwell Maclure, a Woman of Genius
  • She had said herself that a babu read English books to her aloud. In The Time Of Light
  • Transition from maidenhood to what is called the matronly had been too rapid; it was emphasised by her costume, which cried aloud in its excess of modish splendour. The Crown of Life
  • The substance of the conversation remains private, and the media have wondered aloud in bewildered fashion where the "teachable moment" might be. Archive 2009-07-01
  • Students work in groups and ask questions aloud, receiving information through earpieces that feed constant information and personalized entertainment upon request.
  • He has more than 1,000 journals filed away but rarely read: they are just his way of thinking aloud. Times, Sunday Times
  • He is coming towards the end of media commitments and beginning to think aloud. Times, Sunday Times
  • She wasn't sure if they were speaking aloud or communicating through telepathy.
  • And now they both broke down and sobbed aloud without a pause, like birds bereaved, like the sea eagle or taloned vulture, when villages have robbed the nests of their unfledged young.
  • Someone would always be practising the harpsichord or the violin and there was much reading aloud, dressing-up and play-acting.
  • please read the passage aloud
  • However his ringing peroration struck most of those present as being ridiculous, and many laughed aloud.
  • When we do read aloud, we may want to consider how this shared reading can truly convey our love of reading.
  • It was painful, and made me cry aloud .
  • The students are supposed to present this poem by acting it out, reading it aloud, or creating a painting or other work of art; these presentations will be videotaped.
  • The chancellor appears before the court, reading aloud the words printed on a banknote.
  • His focus is on the ending, read aloud at the outset - so perhaps the continuity announcer should introduce the show with a spoiler alert. Times, Sunday Times
  • She wrote letters to Christian's large family for him often, and when a letter arrived for him she'd read it aloud.
  • She wanted to laugh aloud at the prospect of the delight she would give.
  • Just WilliamThe BBC radio series of Richmal Crompton's stories about the home counties scallywag didn't need a cast, just Martin Jarvis reading the stories aloud, capturing the us versus the world outlook of the Outlaws. How children's books escape the page
  • People who are unaccustomed to praying aloud feel more comfortable trying it with just two or three others. Christianity Today
  • Yet her body longed so sore for the springtide freshness of the grass, and was so bewooed of the flowery scent thereof, that though she durst not go unarmed, she did off her footgear and went stealing softly barefoot and with naked legs over the embroidered greensward, saying aloud to herself: If run for the ferry I needs must, lighter shall I run so dight. The Water of the Wondrous Isles
  • The rhythmic text of this delightful tale is great for reading aloud. The Sun
  • Blow, sweet breeze," said D----, half to himself, half aloud; and casting his eyes, alternately from the flying jib and foresail to the swelling gaff-topsail, stooped down and looked under the boom at the land. A Yacht Voyage to Norway, Denmark, and Sweden 2nd edition
  • The dialogue-based text is ideal for reading aloud in class or for encouraging pupils to act out the stories.
  • Further yet, he has astonishingly wondered aloud if she (Pelosi) would "castrate" House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer. Does Chris Matthews have a problem with women?
  • His focus is on the ending, read aloud at the outset - so perhaps the continuity announcer should introduce the show with a spoiler alert. Times, Sunday Times
  • I read some books aloud as she sewed and then we packed a picnic lunch and ate it by a nearby spring.
  • They guys are looking at us with a mixture of curiosity and fear so I decide to read the letter aloud.
  • My better half has written a 'hugeous' novel, and she is going to read it aloud to-day. The Lady with the Dog and Other Stories
  • She had Montaigne read aloud to her as she sat stitching at Knole; she sat absorbed in Chaucer while her husband worked. The Common Reader, Second Series
  • And after the sergeant has read aloud an official declaration under the Official Secrets Act, and each one of them has separately signed an impressive form, Amory calls a jaunty Also los, bitte, meine Herren! across the hangar to a squad of policemen in dungarees who promptly lay their ladders against the British Leyland bus and swarm onto the roof, barking orders at each other until, with infinite circumspection, the backdrop is laid like a precious archaeological find on the concrete floor, and unrolled. Absolute Friends
  • It was past the time for evening service; he called Aglaia, and, thinking there was no one else in the house sang out aloud without embarrassment. The Bishop and Other Stories
  • There is a dedicated place at the kotel reserved for men and women such as yourselves who think women should read aloud from a sefer torah and wear tallitot, etc. Chesler Chronicles » Khomeini-ism Comes to Israel: Women of the Wall vs. the Jewish State
  • And while you may not swear or shout aloud, your writing slows, words dropping stiff and stilted.
  • Since I teach a multiage class of 3rd and 4th graders, Andrew Clements' books are usually perfect choices for read aloud. Archive 2007-07-01
  • a prevailing opinion; for in the garden scene, when _Juliet_ in soliloquy exclaims, "_O Romeo, Romeo_, wherefore art thou _Romeo_?" an auditor archly replied, aloud, "_Because Barry has gone to the other house_. The Jest Book The Choicest Anecdotes and Sayings
  • There are places where the funniness grates, but they are outnumbered by the quips that make you laugh aloud at their appositeness, not merely to 1793 but to our current condition.
  • Most of the jokes aren't laugh-aloud funny but they are incisive.
  • Divine Office; but this did not prevent the formation of such menologies for private use or even the reading of them aloud in the chapter-house or refectory. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman
  • In addition, the model provides no account of how pronounceable non-words are read aloud, nor of how context influences word identification.
  • My sins cry aloud; Cain's murder did so: my afflictions cry aloud; _the floods have lifted up their voice_ (and waters are afflictions), _but thou, O Lord, art mightier than the voice of many waters_; [307] than many temporal, many spiritual afflictions, than any of either kind: and why dost thou not speak to me in that voice? Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions Together with Death's Duel
  • The Duke hands the letter to the clerk, who reads it aloud.
  • Certain catty colleagues liked to read these stories aloud.
  • The other night I was reading aloud to the family about a feller who was standing at the forks of the road with an umbrella over him, when a flock of sheep came along and got tangled up, and so he thought he would help the driver by shooing 'em a little and waving his umbrel. Bill Arp from the uncivil war to date, 1861-1903,
  • Ramses had not spoken of it, and I had never bothered to peruse the volume; the few excerpts Nefret had read aloud were quite enough for me. HE SHALL THUNDER IN THE SKY
  • If you read aloud his best passages, which are written in what he calls his bravura style, you have a near approach to the music of the organ. Modern English Books of Power
  • Unwillingly forced to read his letter aloud to his table at sea, Carl came across this bit and a lump rose in his throat as playful jeers rose from his messmates.
  • He wore a plaid cummerbund and tie with his tuxedo, and was so handsome that I almost laughed aloud. DOWNTOWN
  • Impossible!" was Mr. Hale's rejoinder, when I had read the item aloud; but the incident evidently weighed upon his mind, for late in the afternoon, with many epithets denunciatory of his foolishness, he asked me to acquaint the police with the affair. The Minions of Midas
  • I murmured to myself, to hear the words aloud, make them real, make them apply, affix and apply them to this room by my doing so, but not loud enough for anyone to hear and think me crazy. Boredom & Ennui
  • Still, I can't help but wonder aloud if now that credits credit almost everyone, it isn't far more ignoble to say that writing a large chunk of a movie still doesn't deserve even cursory recognition.
  • Preach! You just said my own thoughts aloud.
  • Great post – I have (much to the annoyance of anyone within earshot) always tried to read my writing aloud while editing. Writer Unboxed » Blog Archive » Read. It. Aloud.
  • It was a verbal disaster for Stockdale, who wondered aloud what he was doing there.
  • I heard a sound of woe, a mournful wail, the voice of one crying aloud in her anguish; yea, such a cry of woe as Naiad nymph might send ringing o'er the hills, while to her cry the depths of rocky grots re-echo her screams at the violence of Helen
  • Marc arrived very late, and overheard guests gossiping about him - "Who is his father?" one snob wondered aloud - and he mocked how gluttonously they eyed the wedding feast. Elizabeth Abbott: Eternal Happiness In A Wedding Dress
  • I want to print out these emails and start reading them aloud at a coffee house while somebody plays the bongos in the background.
  • Milo Slade, a 33-year-old home health-care aide suffers from habitual, unignorable impulses to do any number of odd, "pressure-releasing" actions, from twisting open the vacuum-sealed tops of jelly jars (he keeps a supply on hand in his car trunk) to inducing others to speak aloud in spontaneous conversation a random word ( "loquacious," for instance) that has popped into Milo's head. Dangerous and Strange
  • Work through at least two paragraphs, then reread them aloud in the normal way. 23 Steps to Successful Achievement
  • He read his sister's letter aloud.
  • It also shows in their embarrassed defensiveness when foreigners wonder aloud whether their public life is in need of change.
  • In these interior images, figures read aloud, spin wool, and converse with one another.
  • The teacher asked the students to read the text aloud after class.
  • Read that out aloud and consider the assumptions behind that belief system.
  • He glanced at the letter and began to read it aloud .
  •  Larry later read& line-edited all the novels; we heard read aloud every chap. 1 at semester's end. Hoss Men (divided)
  • The English of the New Jerusalem Bible and New American Bible is sesquipedalian and nearly impossible to read aloud at times.
  • He laughed out loud at his own joke. Aloud has the same meaning but is fairly formal. It can also mean 'in a loud voice'.
  • I was so eager to share the Little House with Eliza that I introduced that world to her at a much earlier age than I was at my first meeting, reading aloud the books I had devoured on my own.
  • A few who do not dare to read aloud will ask the ones who do to read their stories too.
  • Some reading requires quiet and calm; some reading cries out to be shared, perhaps to be read aloud.
  • Some days after the opening of the book of the Gospel, Leo had come at midnight to say aloud, at the door of Francis 'cell, “Domine labia mea aperies,” according to the order he had received; and receiving no reply, he had the curiosity to advance a step further, and to look through the chinks of the door, to see what was going on. The Life and Legends of Saint Francis of Assisi
  • I even read aloud the part of the novel that I had rewritten, which is about as low as a writer can get and much more dangerous for him as a writer than glacier skiing unroped before the full winter snowfall has set over the crevices. A Moveable Feast
  • Upon this the Badawi waxed wroth and they drove at each other, shouting aloud, whilst their horses pricked their ears and raised their tails. 103 And they ceased not clashing together with such a crash that it seemed to each as if the firmament were split in sunder, and they continued to strive like two rams which butt, smiting and exchanging with their spears thrust and cut. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • How the word spoken aloud means both the beginning and the end. History of a Suicide
  • I cried, the shock hurling my voice aloud, out of the confessional whisper.
  • This time, Gerard and Kathleen caught up to us as I was reading the card aloud.
  • I wondered aloud if Lynn thought her lateness might be a way of feeling connected to her mom? SHED Your Stuff, Change Your Life
  • She cried aloud in protest.
  • She read aloud with a passion and urgency that eclipsed everything else around her.
  • Down the stretch, Miller continued thinking aloud: "It's hard to believe Rocco is going to win the United States Open. Woods brings out top ratings for U.S. Open
  • My eldest daughter wondered aloud whether her worst fears were about to be realised: that cruises really were for people of a certain vintage. Times, Sunday Times
  • For the uninitiated, a reading is more than someone standing at a lectern, reading aloud to a bunch of book geeks.
  • The verse is clearly to be read aloud as three beats followed by a rest, followed by three more beats, followed by a rest — and therefore as two tetrameters in a row, each of which has its fourth beat silent.
  • Trials could be held this summer and by September the competition could be open for pupils to memorise two poems and recite them aloud. Times, Sunday Times
  • Whether they say it aloud or not, most men expect their wives to be faithful.
  • Mr. Adams read nursery rhymes aloud every night in an effort to "remap" his brain and was able to recover much of his speaking ability. Foreign Accents, Alien Hands and Other Medical Oddities
  • Although aimed at an older audience, this book displays the same lively, read-aloud quality.
  • Last week viewers saw her fighting back tears as a letter from her mum was read out aloud. The Sun
  • You must be clicking on a link designed to help partially sighted people by reading this code out aloud. Times, Sunday Times
  • Many groups progressed to conducting full-fledged Simhat Torah services for women only — services in which women read the Torah portion aloud and gave aliyyot to every woman present. Women's Tefillah Movement.
  • Then later, when the schoolmaster would read from the Inverness Courier to one group after another at the post office and at the "smiddy" (it was only fear of the elder MacPherson, that kept the master from reading it aloud at the kirk door before the service) accounts of the "remarkable playing" of Cameron, the brilliant young "half-back" of the Academy in Edinburgh, the Glen settled down into an assured conviction that it had reached the pinnacle of vicarious glory, and that in all Scotland there was none to compare with their young "chieftain" as, quite ignoring the Captain, they loved to call him. Corporal Cameron of the North West Mounted Police; a tale of the Macleod trail
  • These students, especially, should be encouraged to sing aloud the words of the pieces in their method books simultaneously with their playing.
  • Adrina had to bite her lip to prevent herself laughing aloud. TREASON KEEP
  • I had never heard Resian spoken aloud before encountering the mp3 Carniola had linked to, and can attest that it is genuinely incomprehensible even to a native speaker of the Northern-Primorsko dialect of Slovene, geographically closest to Rezija. Languagehat.com: SLOVENIAN DIALECTS.
  • All of this babblement makes this a delightful read-aloud, both for the listener, and for the adult reader who can have fun with the twitch-tickling wordplay.
  • Then he committed all to the resistless and devouring might of the fire; he groaned aloud and callid on his dead comrade by name. The Iliad of Homer
  • My eldest daughter wondered aloud whether her worst fears were about to be realised: that cruises really were for people of a certain vintage. Times, Sunday Times
  • And they have a kind of incantatory, repetitive but -- but incantatory eloquence that is much more apparent, and even the meanings, I think, more apparent if you read it aloud. Great Books: My Adventures with Homer, Rousseau, Woolf and Other Indestructible Writers of the Western World
  • In addition, the model provides no account of how pronounceable non-words are read aloud, nor of how context influences word identification.
  • Typical of his contribution was Chelsea's third goal, which saw him dispossess Peter Odemwingie on the left touchline near the halfway line and send Florent Malouda sprinting away to cross for Lampard, who finished with dead-eyed accuracy from 16 yards. Chelsea's Didier Drogba makes case to start instead of Fernando Torres
  • They wrote essays, or lectures, or sermons and they read them aloud.
  • He laughed out loud at his own joke. Aloud has the same meaning but is fairly formal. It can also mean 'in a loud voice'.

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