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 proclaim [prә'kleim]   添加此单词到默认生词本
vt. 宣布, 公告, 宣言, 表明, 赞扬

[法] 宣布, 宣告, 公布




    proclaim


    Proclaim \Pro*claim"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Proclaimed}; p. pr.
    & vb. n. {Proclaiming}.] [OE. proclamen, L. proclamare; pro
    before, forward + clamare to call or cry out: cf. F.
    proclamer. See {Claim}.]
    1. To make known by public announcement; to give wide
    publicity to; to publish abroad; to promulgate; to
    declare; as, to proclaim war or peace.

    To proclaim liberty to the captives. --Isa. lxi. 1.

    For the apparel oft proclaims the man. --Shak.

    Throughout the host proclaim
    A solemn council forthwith to be held. --Milton.

    2. To outlaw by public proclamation.

    I heard myself proclaimed. --Shak.

    Syn: To publish; promulgate; declare; announce. See
    {Announce}.

    Announce \An*nounce"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Announced}; p. pr. &
    vb. n. {Announcing}.] [OF. anoncier, F. annoncer, fr. L.
    annuntiare; ad + nuntiare to report, relate, nuntius
    messenger, bearer of news. See {Nuncio}, and cf.
    {Annunciate}.]
    1. To give public notice, or first notice of; to make known;
    to publish; to proclaim.

    Her [Q. Elizabeth's] arrival was announced through
    the country by a peal of cannon from the ramparts.
    --Gilpin.

    2. To pronounce; to declare by judicial sentence.

    Publish laws, announce
    Or life or death. --Prior.

    Syn: To proclaim; publish; make known; herald; declare;
    promulgate.

    Usage: To {Publish}, {Announce}, {Proclaim}, {Promulgate}. We
    {publish} what we give openly to the world, either by
    oral communication or by means of the press; as, to
    publish abroad the faults of our neighbors. We
    {announce} what we declare by anticipation, or make
    known for the first time; as, to {announce} the speedy
    publication of a book; to {announce} the approach or
    arrival of a distinguished personage. We {proclaim}
    anything to which we give the widest publicity; as, to
    {proclaim} the news of victory. We {promulgate} when
    we proclaim more widely what has before been known by
    some; as, to {promulgate} the gospel.


    Announce \An*nounce"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Announced}; p. pr. &
    vb. n. {Announcing}.] [OF. anoncier, F. annoncer, fr. L.
    annuntiare; ad + nuntiare to report, relate, nuntius
    messenger, bearer of news. See {Nuncio}, and cf.
    {Annunciate}.]
    1. To give public notice, or first notice of; to make known;
    to publish; to proclaim.

    Her [Q. Elizabeth's] arrival was announced through
    the country by a peal of cannon from the ramparts.
    --Gilpin.

    2. To pronounce; to declare by judicial sentence.

    Publish laws, announce
    Or life or death. --Prior.

    Syn: To proclaim; publish; make known; herald; declare;
    promulgate.

    Usage: To {Publish}, {Announce}, {Proclaim}, {Promulgate}. We
    {publish} what we give openly to the world, either by
    oral communication or by means of the press; as, to
    publish abroad the faults of our neighbors. We
    {announce} what we declare by anticipation, or make
    known for the first time; as, to {announce} the speedy
    publication of a book; to {announce} the approach or
    arrival of a distinguished personage. We {proclaim}
    anything to which we give the widest publicity; as, to
    {proclaim} the news of victory. We {promulgate} when
    we proclaim more widely what has before been known by
    some; as, to {promulgate} the gospel.

    1. Pozsgay shot up in popular esteem last January when he became the first public leader to proclaim that the 1956 revolt was a popular uprising and not a counterrevolution, as it had officially been termed for more than 32 years.
    2. These books are often found on tables in the center of book stores with tags that proclaim markdowns of more than 50%.
    3. Signs in front of several of the manses proclaim them to have been condo-ized, the track offers Pick Six and trifecta wagering along with other new-fangled betting gimmicks, and lines everywhere are Manhattan-long.
    4. He went on television to proclaim that city leaders' criticism of his department had created a public so hostile that such a death was inevitable.
    5. The Wilsonians hastened to proclaim their management of the war economy a shining success, and the public swallowed the story.
    6. There are now bumper stickers on cars in the Maine resort town that proclaim: "KenneBushport."
    7. If it has really 'won the Cold War', as its leaders like to proclaim, it should prepare to welcome as members all those east European states that are ready to undertake the very serious obligations involved.
    8. Le Grand, as his paint-spattered coveralls proclaim, was charged with injecting American-style verve into a neglected suburb selected as the site for an international shopping district.
    9. Bell Atlantic and US West also proclaim their innocence.
    10. It is also likely to endorse further industry and price reforms, and proclaim the creation of a 'socialist market economy' as one of its key tasks. Congresses of the Chinese Communist party are, however, as much about policy as they are about jobs.
    11. Tyson witnessed Monday's go, and his trainer, Kevin Rooney, was around later to proclaim such a fight inevitable.
    12. "It is hypocritical for the city to proclaim its desire not to use the seminary site against the wishes of the archdiocese while refusing to take any positive action that would obviate the problem," Sand said.
    13. Retail sales are off 40% and along the Avenida Central, the normally jammed shopping district, a dwindling number of customers all but ignore signs everywhere that proclaim bargains at "crisis prices."
    14. But Rep. Ulysses Guimaraes, speaker of Brazil's House and president of the constitutional convention, says he would like officially to proclaim the new constitution on Sept. 7, the national holiday that commemmorates independence.
    15. But to hear him proclaim that such illegal trading is also unethical is curious.
    16. Women also were the first to report the empty tomb after the resurrection and the first to meet the risen Christ and proclaim it to others.
    17. Organizers of the defiance campaign had planned several rallies on Sunday to proclaim that the anti-apartheid coalition had "unbanned" itself.
    18. "They are manifestly being exploited by defendants in this case, whether or not they proclaim their purpose to be in furtherance of their religious beliefs," Potter wrote.
    19. Calendars proclaim March 20 as the "first day of spring."
    20. Both are also members of the Inter-Regional Deputies Group, a group of parliamentarians who had considered but then dropped a proposal to proclaim themselves a "political opposition." The national Communist Party has already suffered one splintering.
    21. Market watchers have been reluctant to proclaim the Dow's summer rally back on track despite its 68-point surge last week, the key barometer's biggest weekly gain since April.
    22. Why not raise Social Security payments so that the Reagan administration can proclaim proudly that it has abolished poverty for our senior citizens?"
    23. These events proclaim loudly man's inalienable rights.
    24. Robert Lee, a young RAM lieutenant, appeared on a commandeered television station during the August 1987 coup attempt to proclaim his movement's goals.
    25. Serb authorities on Friday detained several ousted ethnic Albanian political leaders on charges they met in secret Sept. 7 to adopt a constitution and proclaim the province Yugoslavia's seventh republic, media reports said.
    26. And when he appeared live on ABC's "Good Morning America" that morning, the conservative commentator used his segment to proclaim that "This campaign is really on the go" and that he has "A bold vision to replace what they don't have in Washington."
    27. Newly emerged from his long silence and without a wall or journal to proclaim his views, Ren seems uncertain how to proceed.
    28. But even though Burger King just completed its best quarter in three years, with profit up 25%, management concedes it's too early to proclaim a total turnaround for the unit, which was acquired along with Pillsbury Co. last year.
    29. About 1,000 people jammed into the downtown Cankarjev Dom convention hall in this Slovenian capital to hear party leader France Tomsic proclaim the founding of the Socialist Democratic Union of Slovenia.
    30. Over three successive days the market lost more than 6 percent, as measured by the Dow Jones industrial average of 30 stocks, prompting The Wall Street Journal to proclaim the "official" arrival of the bear market.
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