Blaring Sentence Examples

blaring
  • Screams and blaring horns came from the streets.

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  • He blinked, registering the blaring alarm.

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  • With the alarm blaring in his mind, he only half paid attention.

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  • The Irish rock blaring from the bar below was loud enough, and cigarette smoke already curled in through the window.

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  • But gradually, video games with their blaring audio and costumed aliens burst from the booths in the Las Vegas Convention Center and...

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  • Deidre stopped in the middle of the sidewalk, feeling very exposed to the blaring world.

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  • Return to menu Exploring timbre Mellow, tinny, blaring... each instrument has its own distinctive timbre, or tone color.

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  • Do you really want the mating call of an African elephant blaring out at you at two o'clock in the morning without warning?

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  • Ignoring traffic, blaring horns and fingered salutes, we kissed on cheeks, then lips and hips gridlocked.

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  • He was carrying a stereo system on his shoulder, out of which was blaring loud rave music.

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  • This forces you to get up and search for the clock to turn off the blaring alarm.

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  • Return to menu Exploring Timbre Mellow, tinny, blaring... each instrument has its own distinctive timbre, or tone color.

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  • It is not too blaring and distracting to deter you from play.

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  • It's sometimes hard to be able to focus on hot loving action when there's laundry in the corner and a TV blaring downstairs.

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  • Today, you will often see neon signs blaring from outside commercial buildings, announcing psychic and fortune telling services.

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  • She heard the blaring trance music before she opened the car door and smelled the unmistakable scent of marijuana mixed with incense and body odor.

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  • Toss in David Spade in an as yet undefined role and some strange accusations about some blaring Bon Jovi music in the neighborhood, and the whole thing gets more confusing.

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  • But, secondly, the pneumatic utterances technically known as speaking with tongues failed to reach this level of intelligibility; for Paul compares "a tongue" to a material object which should merely make a noise, to a pipe or harp twanged or blown at random without tune or time, to a trumpet blaring idly and not according to a code of signal notes.

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