0 to express something with strong feeling, especially in a loud voice or with forceful language -- 朗誦;(尤指)大聲宣佈,慷慨激昂地聲稱
[ + speech ] "The end of the world is at hand!" the poster declaimed. 「世界末日就要來了!」那張傳單上寫著。
She declaimed against the evils of capitalism. 她聲稱反對資本主義的種種罪惡。
Confined for the most part to simple musical learning, they are unable to distinguish what must be declaimed from what is to be sung.
The chorus enacts a variety of stylized rituals - clapping, stamping, processing around the performance space and declaiming multi-lingual texts to sections of the audience.
The lad, nothing loath, would declaim before them, more often than not in a mock heroic strain that greatly delighted his workmates.
When he declaimed "the multitudinous seas incarnadine" was he speaking above their heads?
Like old institutional economists, these authors declaim much interest in the microanalytics of institutional formation.
There are improvisatory elements, as well as extra-pianistic activities such as whistling, declaiming, drumming on the lid or frame of the instrument, and operating other sonic objects.
Macbeth is neither thinking nor feeling aloud; he is declaiming.
The sampled gong accompaniment is at times overwhelming in its power yet the recorded sound is never cramped or distorted, allowing the voices to declaim in total clarity.