How To Use Blare In A Sentence

  • Leaked Reports Detail Iran's Aid for Iraqi Militias," blared the headline on afront page story inThe New York Times, which went on to report on several incidents recounted in WikiLeaks documents that journalist Michael Gordon called "the shadow war between the United States and Iraqi militias backed by Iran's Revolutionary Guards. Ali Gharib: What Did WikiLeaks Really Tell Us About Iran?
  • She hears nothing but the breeze rustling the curtains of her bedroom window, and the angry blare of the television coming from her father's bedroom.
  • The trumpets blared as the procession got under way.
  • Perhaps strangest of all, the American troops brought in their own "psyops" trucks - for psychological operations - and blared sounds that created a nightmarish duet with the mosques: old AC/DC songs, something that sounded like a sonar ping, the cavalry charge. Archive 2004-11-01
  • Feet sounded on the deck, the thud of a heavy rope against the hull, the blare of a siren. HIGH STAND
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  • These systems provide better sound, and also protect musicians' hearing from the blare of the huge sound systems used in large concert halls.
  • It was a pimped-out, copper-colored Buick Riviera slowly tooling down Lenox Avenue, and as that monster slowed behind other cars that song blared from the 8-Track. Archive 2008-02-01
  • Through megaphones, voices in broken English blared out at them, urging them to surrender and lay down their arms.
  • They sat there horrified as the television blared the awful news.
  • MEXICAN FOLK music blares from a boom box, the sounds of accordions filtering up the stairs.
  • It was a good night, as we strove to make conversation employing sign-language and shouting against the blare of the music.
  • Another horn blared behind me.
  • Then Huysmans really hits his stride, likening whisky to trombones, "raising the roof of the mouth" with their blare. Do They Taste of Trumpets?
  • Mosul University library, with its rare manuscripts, was also sacked, despite appeals blared from the mosque minarets to the people to stop destroying their city, the Arab TV network al-Jazeera reported.
  • The girl yelled over the blare of rifle fire from all around.
  • She blared out a warning.
  • Where you see white blare, like a loud trumpet, in real life is all lacy "icicle" lights. Joyful, joyful
  • Though the centre is not immune from horn blare and tyre screech, a tranquillity hangs in the air, nurtured by luxuriant greenery and birdsong.
  • The movie's theme song, which booms over the opening credits, is Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Fortunate Son," whose chorus laments "It ain't me …" with the blare of defiance, not resignation. The End of the World as We Know It
  • Brakes screeched and horn blared but Harry just sauntered over to me so nonchalantly.
  • As they walked inside they were greeted by the loud blare of popular music.
  • Household items like the blare of the telephone's ring and the oppressive murk of Plath's London lighting scheme distort in her mind to create a homespun hell.
  • The loud blare of the buzzer, signalling the end of the game, cut through the gymnasium.
  • Music blared from the open window of the house across the way.
  • Then the profit-and-loss column of his mind blared out its warning.
  • The urgent blare of his car horn drew their attention back to the sheriff's tall figure.
  • But it's not our story," the titles blared on the screen on behalf of the judges. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • Cyclists, horse carts, two-wheelers, three-wheelers and loaded lorries all jostled for their bit of space while horns blared and tempers got increasingly frayed.
  • A haulage company is on trial to drastically cut the din of revving engines and fork-lift trucks, the blare of lorry cab radios and the shouting and swearing of some staff.
  • We may find that some religious augmentation of a school's dress code is not obtrusive, while others violently blare forth!
  • Soused patrons sit in the flesh-friendly nightclub's back area, coughing up $20 for lap dances as hip-hop songs blare on the speakers.
  • Diconsolate, annoyed, subdued, Florian and I wait; as we wait the taxi driver turns on the radio and it blares some discordant, ululating, quarter-toned Arab music.
  • He threw himself --- recklessly, belligerently --- into the skin-chapping blare of oceanic pandemonium. BEHINDLINGS
  • They shrieked, yelled, blared, shrilled, and boomed the scandals and horrors of the moment in multivocal, multigraphic clamor, tainting the peaceful air breathed by everyday people going about their everyday business, with incredible blatancies which would be forgotten on the morrow in the excitement of fresh percussions, though the cumulative effect upon the public mind and appetite might be ineradicable. Success A Novel
  • Horns blared in the street outside.
  • I blared my horn.
  • The loudspeakers blared across the square.
  • Then, as if to illustrate her arrival to any so afflicted, the Pegasus's foghorn blared out with one long deep bass blast. LET NOT THE DEEP
  • Horns blared in the street outside.
  • A loud announcement blared in full volume outside in the corridor.
  • Tashkurgan's best - known hotel is opposite a supermarket equipped with a tannoy system. A woman's voice blared.
  • The blare of horns could be heard in the distance.
  • Another blare of trumpets signaled that the limousine carrying Brezhnev had entered the Southwest Gate.
  • Opening The New York Times on Friday morning, I blinked.The headline on its lead story, spread over two columns, blared out, "Obama's Economic View Is Rejected on World Stage.
  • When the wind came roaring across, he could hear in broken waves of sound the riotous blare of the instruments.
  • Its blare sent birds fluttering from the branches of the live oak that overhung the gate, making the Spanish moss sway as if it were alive.
  • The scorching sun beat down, and live gospel music blared from the makeshift stage. POLITICAL HOT TOPICS: November 27, 2009
  • That the engine pulls firmly, with a creamy, discreet blare, across a broad rev-range helps.
  • His multitracked trumpets mimic the weary blare of the foghorns, often taking their pitches as the root notes for fantastic chords.
  • Dance music blared from speakers and the birthday girl’s aunts began dishing overflowing mounds of food onto plates: chicken, beef, rice, pap, chakalaka a spicy salad made of cooked vegetables, mashed beetroots, mashed potatoes. No Place Left to Bury the Dead
  • In the Midwest, they are terrified of flashbacks: full-serve premium: $2.70, blared the sign at one Chicago gas station last summer. The Surging Price Of Power
  • Someone should stand out front of this and blare from a radio all the incendiary comments Rush has made. Think Progress » The overwhelming diversity of the Southern Republican Leadership Conference: one woman, one person of color.
  • The Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim… Can anyone hear that name blare across the loudspeakers and not think of Nick Adenhart, the young Angel killed by a drunk driver this past April? Yanks-Angels: Game 3 | ATTACKERMAN
  • The crazy, steaming city swirled and blared around me, the strange language honked and gabbled.
  • Mosque minarets across Beirut blared out readings from the Koran.
  • The music, that I was trying to ignore, blared out of a sound system under guidance of a DJ.
  • The news blared out on the television set that occupied and lit up the downstage area.
  • BTW, The microphone the Thug Party has these days blares loudly, constantly and viciously about their sworn enemies and making nicey-nicey with them. Mostly, We are Idiots. So How Did We Elect a Genius?
  • Guests were invited to drink shots of vodka and eat cold borscht soup from tin bowls, while loud speakers blared old communist hymns.
  • Horns blare as cars weave to avoid horse-drawn carts.
  • While a Beyonce tune blared from the speakers, Monk was similarly occupied. Redskins' party: Monk's grace softens wait for Hall of Fame
  • Sadhus in loincloths chant mantras while Bollywood theme tunes blare from tinny speakers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Leo had no need to answer for a voice now blared from the floor riveting everyone's attention. DREAMS OF INNOCENCE
  • The walls and the moats, the gates and the sentinels, the long High Street with the great government buildings, and the constant rattle of drums and blare of trumpets; they made my little heart beat quicker beneath my sagathy stuff jacket. Micah Clarke His Statement as made to his three grandchildren Joseph, Gervas and Reuben During the Hard Winter of 1734
  • Beneath it all is the constant blare of traffic.
  • I knew it was him coming when I heard a blare of rock music, followed by the harsh growl of an old, unclean engine.
  • Natalie Portman, apparent soon-to-be Oscar winner, " the Washington Post headline blared, with only a hint of drollery.
  • I collapse on the floor, curled up in an almost foetal position, head pressed up against one of the speakers as the music blares out at ear-damaging volume.
  • The headline in the newspaper blared that thousands of people were stranded.
  • In the first moments he was in the locker room, he said he was stunned at how quiet the room was, so he went out and bought a boombox from which he could blare rap music to create a more lively environment. The Great Carmelo Experiment
  • This time he programmed his computer to blare loud music directly into his ears, jolting him awake just minutes before Zechariah started to stir.
  • The horns of the taxis blared
  • Instead of a sound crew trying to maximize the blare, each musical element of this performance was distinctive.
  • A violone grunts out a low accompaniment to a vinegar-sharp violin which saws out the air, while a trumpet blares in at intervals to endeavor to unite the two, and a flute does what it can, but not what it would. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 03, No. 18, April, 1859
  • Music blared out from the open window.
  • Front man Eric Budd's vocals are unpolished yet still manage to be smooth and palatable; and their lone saxophone is better than a full horn section - its sound will surely make your body writhe with its sexy blare.
  • Soca, ragga, R&B, hip hop, soul, funk, even techno and house music blares through hundreds of sound systems.
  • Feet sounded on the deck, the thud of a heavy rope against the hull, the blare of a siren. HIGH STAND
  • And then he heard his name blare across the Internet broadcast. Post-gazette.com - News
  • The hearing of both Ozzy Osbourne and The Who guitarist Peter Townshend was damaged by prolonged exposure to the high wattage blare from stacks of amplifiers.
  • Advertisements are annoyingly blared from a neon cityscape that mirrors modern-day Tokyo, minus the flying machines. Eric’s Top 10 Movies That Prove the Future Will Suck » Scene-Stealers
  • The blare from the horns and the shouting from nearby drivers and pedestrians waiting to cross was both fierce and ugly.
  • The ideal, a thing of the intellect and the sentiment only, cannot so easily bring about its own effectuation; force of circumstance, the will to survive of existing actualities, the insistent past of our own nature are not so easily blown away by the eager shouting of a few high and great words or even by the breath of the thought behind them, however loudly blare the trumpets of the ideal. Archive 2008-12-01
  • Yet, erectile dysfunction medication ads blare regularly from CNN and sperm is discussed at length on CBS. Christine Bronstein: Why Are Family Jewels Just for Men?
  • She blared Alejandra Guzman records, went to Roseland regularly owned every Madonna video, including that last nasty one.
  • In the wilderness such interference is rare, but in cities (where tunnels often start and finish) radio stations constantly blare out noise on many frequencies, making such filtering essential.
  • Another blare of trumpets called the attention of the spectators, announcing that the first round of the joust would commence.
  • While they are small in numbers relative to the whole population, with the help of wealthy patrons like the Koch Brothers and Rupert Murdoch, who gives both financial aid and a political public address system to blare their message, they have whipped up public frustration with "the system" to give elements of the disgruntled silent majority the same kind of voyeuristic vent that they get from watching Simon Cowell rip into aspiring singers. Brian Ross: Throw the Bums In!
  • The loudspeakers blared the speech repeatedly.
  • The blare of sirens seemed continuous Thursday as emergency workers continued rescue efforts. Tornado survivors sift through what's left in Tuscaloosa
  • Though he tried to listen to the darker music that Duncan encouraged him at lunch, he also couldn't forget about the bouncy pop music that blared from the speakers at work everyday.
  • Wall was the last player introduced during player introductions and he had to contain himself from breaking out into a dance as the music blared from the speakers. Midnight Tip-Off more marketing savvy, than madness
  • Being over the mercado is a terrible place to be at 6: 00 am when the young folks setting up their stands below seem to need to blare the music to get their day started, but it's a great place to be later in the day when you want to pull up the chair and sit there gazing out at the mountain off a little way in the distance and listen to the sounds of the mercado. 1st Trip part one
  • It blares from the speakers of clothes boutiques and record shops.
  • Another blare of trumpets called the attention of the spectators, announcing that the first round of the joust would commence.
  • The blare from the horns and the shouting from nearby drivers and pedestrians waiting to cross was both fierce and ugly.
  • Techno music blared out of every vehicle at every hour of the night.
  • It was barely mid-morning when they heard the first blare of the trumpet.
  • The blare of the car horn alerted the members of the Story family who realised 17-year-old Ben's Toyota was no longer parked in the driveway of their home in Larkspur near Denver.
  • Sirens blared loudly in my ears, deepening the throb in my temples.
  • The famous song blared out of the speakers, and some kids even got right up and started dancing.
  • I must have spaced out, because before I knew it there was a great blare of horns behind me.
  • From the initial blare of the trumpets, the album has that thrill of half-recalled familiarity.
  • The blare of the car horn alerted the members of the Story family who realized 17-year-old Ben's Toyota was no longer parked in the driveway of their home in Larkspur near Denver.
  • hoo... look at that album line-up. brings back memories of my childhood. just turned 32 today, and seein' those old hairstyles put a grin on my mug (not thay I had one like that, I'm messkin). the music was constantly blared on my boombox (aka ghettoblaster), and tv play by ed lover & dr. dre. Peace On Earth, Goodwill To Men
  • Grim-faced shepherds swing heavy cudgels, anxious to be clear of the road where horns blare impatiently.
  • Loud rap music blared out of the house as people spilled out of the party onto the lawn.
  • When the characters are not screaming at each other, televisions blare in the background, or the film's soundtrack deafens you.
  • ‘Sick and tired patients in uproar’ blared one front page headline in a leading daily newspaper.
  • Then, as if to illustrate her arrival to any so afflicted, the Pegasus's foghorn blared out with one long deep bass blast. LET NOT THE DEEP
  • Clusters of Chinese fishermen broke the silence with laughter and the tinny blare of transistor radios. TALES OF THE CITY
  • A brown cricket chirping in a field of black ones, or a cornet hidden behind a blare of trumpets. THE HUNDREDTH MAN
  • A poster, white lettering on red background, blared from the gloom of the opposite wall.
  • The Braves lingered on the field a little longer than usual, soaking up the cheers from 29,299 while BTO's "Taking Care of Business" blared from the speakers and "10 Straight Championships" flashed on the scoreboard. USATODAY.com - Braves gut Fish to take another NL East title
  • We had scarcely received this intelligence when we heard the blare of the trumpets, and the next moment we saw the officers push their horses up the declivitous bank, closely followed by their men, whom they formed up in the prairie. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 55, No. 339, January, 1844
  • The air was thick with the sound of crickets -- a noise foreign to a metropolitan girl like me more accustomed to the sudden blare of fire engines and the bicycle bells of impatient delivery boys. Charu Suri: Another Side of Lone Star State
  • Only this night, in a squeal of brakes, a blare of horn and a terrible flash of light, young Fraggle, attempting to surf between one station and the next, slips between the train's wheels.
  • Football fans will perhaps be unsurprised to learn that the vuvuzela, whose apian drone soundtracked yet another summer of hurt, has blared its way into the dictionary's pages. Climate change and the vuvuzela leave mark on Oxford Dictionary of English
  • The radio blared out pop music.
  • Cyclists, horse carts, two-wheelers, three-wheelers and loaded lorries all jostled for their bit of space while horns blared and tempers got increasingly frayed.
  • Pop music blares as dodgem cars slam into each other and a gaggle of teenage girls in pink fur haloes giggles its way up sideshow alley.
  • A motorcar horn blared furiously from the main gate.
  • Music blared out from the open window.
  • Sound boxes blare devotional numbers, priests chant mantras and, as evening descends, one can find people of all ages flocking the pandals.
  • I don't know if I can stand craning my neck up while the speakers blare in my face, but it seems pretty cool. The Wall Mounted Desk | Lifehacker Australia
  • A student residence across the street blared Jackson music from a stereo.
  • A loud horn blared as they merged onto the highway.
  • There, when the sentence of the Fathers stands fixed for battle, the Consul, arrayed in the robe of Quirinus and the Gabine cincture, with his own hand unbars the grating doors, with his own lips calls battles forth; then all the rest follow on, and the brazen trumpets blare harsh with consenting breath. The Aeneid of Virgil
  • A voice, no a whisper, sounded through the air above the blare of the storm.
  • She jumped as loud trumpets suddenly blared and the roar of approval from a massive crowd sounded.
  • Behind him, a horn blared.
  • Where this is not observed, there is no real music, but only a devilish blare and hubbub.
  • All of a sudden, alarms blared out over the loud speakers as the facility went on high alert.
  • Smith's multitracked trumpets mimic the weary blare of the foghorns, often taking their pitches as the root notes for fantastic chords.
  • Once upon a time, I saw a bootlegged video of someone on a crazy contraption called a skateboard doing jumps and spins on a thing called a half-pipe while loud music blared and flash bulbs ignited. This isn't in the Olympics, but two-man luge is?
  • The alternative rock soundtrack is wonderfully raw as it blares from the speakers.
  • SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Confetti fell to the floor and Tina Turner's ` ` Simply The Best '' blared from the speakers. USATODAY.com - Basketball - Golden State vs. Utah
  • The pandemonium - for every horn must blare - cannot be imagined.
  • The loudspeakers blared the speech repeatedly.
  • The Cougars (9-2, 7-0) held a long and boisterous celebration at midfield after the game, with the seniors taking turns at the microphone before Elvis '` ` Viva Las Vegas' 'blared from the stadium loudspeakers and athletic director Tom Holmoe accepted a bid to the Las Vegas Bowl as the MWC champions. USATODAY.com - College Football - New Mexico vs. BYU
  • Its gambling dens ariot, its gramophones all ablare; The Spell of the Yukon and Other Verses
  • Music blared out from the open window.
  • As he got up, his chair scooting back and his plate scraping the table sounded like a loud horn blared inside a library.
  • The noise and the blare, the bands and the screaming, the pageantry and oratory of the long full campaign fade on election day.
  • The loudspeakers blared across the square.
  • Its blare sent birds fluttering from the branches of the live oak that overhung the gate, making the Spanish moss sway as if it were alive.
  • Jewish moral reformer Belle Moskowitz despaired that in Jewish neighborhoods, “the glare of lights and the blare of music strikes you on every side.” A Renegade History of the United States
  • He cautiously poked the first node, concentrating solely on the object at hand so that he didn't hear the loud blare of ambulances approaching.
  • Music blared out from the open window.
  • While rock music blared out, the main stage was starkly silent as groups of concert-goers gazed quietly at flowers and candles covering the muddy ground.
  • Surprised by the sudden yell he lost control of the car for a moment and swerved onto the other side of the road causing a car coming in the opposite direction to blare its horn.
  • The radio blared out the exciting news.
  • The brass band blared from the wrought iron bandstand, families promenaded and old men gossiped in the shade of the neatly clipped box trees.
  • The blare of the car horn alerted the members of the Story family who realised 17-year-old Ben's Toyota was no longer parked in the driveway of their home in Larkspur near Denver.
  • Far away in the distance somewhere back near the Cork road, hooters blared angrily as road rage mounted.

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