0 to be a sign that something important, and often good, is starting to happen, or to make something publicly known, especially by celebrating or praising it:
2 to announce or signal that something is approaching:
The trade agreement heralded a new era of economic development.
The judge sets things in order and commands the herald to proclaim them.
For a king who led a party in civil war could no longer easily be heralded as the natural centre of all order.
Almost all articles supporting the criminalisation of punters heralded this claim.
Ultimately, it was simply a sign of sheer decay and of impending death - though it could herald eternal glory.
Nanotechnologists have already, by moving the atoms about, made the smallest switches that herald the time when microscopic computers or minuscule robots will be produced.
It would be woefully premature to herald the return of precolonial history to the mainstream academic fold.
The emergence of the discipline of developmental psychopathology, like other beginnings and births, was heralded with considerable excitement and visions of future accomplishment.
These processes heralded social conflicts and indeed had important and consequential effects on the city's social dynamics.
中文繁体
預示…的開始, (尤指透過慶祝或讚揚)宣佈(常指好事), 預兆,先兆…
More中文简体
预示…的开始, (尤指通过庆祝或赞扬)宣布(常指好事), 预兆,前兆…
MoreEspañol
presagiar, anunciar, precursor…
MorePortuguês
anunciar, proclamar, arauto…
MoreTürk dili
açıklamak, ilan etmek, bildirmek…
MoreFrançais
héraut, messager/-ère, annoncer…
MoreČeština
herold, zvěstovat…
MoreDansk
sendebud, varsle…
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