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Uncommonly loud girl drinking wine with soldiers
Answer for the clue "Uncommonly loud girl drinking wine with soldiers ", 10 letters:
stentorian
Alternative clues for the word stentorian
Word definitions for stentorian in dictionaries
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"of powerful voice," c.1600, from Stentor , legendary Greek herald in the Trojan War, whose voice (described in the "Iliad") was as loud as 50 men. His name is from Greek stenein "groan, moan," from PIE imitative root *(s)ten- , source of Old English þunor ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
adj. used of the voice [syn: booming ]
Usage examples of stentorian.
Religious proclamations, stentorian speeches by assorted politicians who could not tell a spiral galaxy from a supernova.
He used to spend a great deal of his time in this room writing, translating, and at times singing strange words in a stentorian voice, while passers-by on the lake would stop to listen with astonishment and curiosity to the singular sounds.
Gnaeus Pompeius could even listen with a look of alert interest on his face to the stentorian voices of the Sertorian heralds who dogged his footsteps detailing to his soldiers the hideous fate in store for the women of Lauro when they reached their new owners in far-western Lusitania.
Here the only sounds disturbing the stillness were steady munchings of many mouths, and stentorian breathings from all but invisible noses, ending in snores and puffs like the blowing of bellows slowly.
These two females did afterwards depone that Mr Willet in his consternation uttered but one word, and called that up the stairs in a stentorian voice, six distinct times.
The cub let out a series of pleased grunts that sounded like stentorian giggles, and let go of him.
Outside the cottage the loudhailers were screeching in their metallic stentorian voices.
At intervals they halted, the cacophony would cease abruptly, and Polichinelle would announce in a stentorian voice that at five o’clock that evening in the old market, M.
Doors swung wide, sweet horns sounded, and the warder announced in stentorian breaths, “The Royse Teidez dy Chalion!