blare造句

The music begins with a blare of trumpets.

Car horns blare far more blatantly in Shanghai than they ever do in Hong Kong.

Upbeat patriotic songs blare on street corners and cars plastered with Qadhafi portraits speed around, sounding their horns.

The gamut of tones that a voice or an instrument is capable of producing. There was the sound of hammering and the blare of music from the radio.

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.

The blare of the speaker burst upon our ears.

Right now blare , the clay that splatters falls on their body in succession.

Time has no divisions to mark its passage, there is never a thunderstorm or blare of trumpets to announce the beginning of a new month or year.

But a few blocks south, far away from the blare of Hummer limousine horns, at the fashionable opening of the Algus Greenspon Gallery on Morton Street, a more demure look prevailed.

blare造句

Radio stations blare an impressive repertoire of catchy revolutionary tunes.

People have huge shrines in their homes which blare out a red light from their Windows late at night.

In Britain pleasure piers grew from every nook of the coast just as the Empire expanded, and the blare of military bands along their decks echoed the triumphal march of colonisers overseas.

A blare of sunlight flooded the room as he opened the shutters.

Zhu is imitating the blare of police sirens in his native Beijing. Like the flash of magnesium in contact with air, the subject of law and order causes a similar reaction.

A blare of sound, a roar of life, a vast array of human hives, appeal to the astonished senses in equivocal terms.

Every time Susan opens her mouth, it sounds like the blare of an ambulance siren.

Sit the voice namely pares off ashore the cordless wire to blare at the north air namely can hear an outdoor in the home.