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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 15, 2015 is:
stentorian \sten-TOR-ee-un\ adjective
: extremely loud
Examples:
The foreman barked out his orders in a stentorian tone that could be heard clearly over the din of the factory's machinery.
"[Lawrence] Tanter … was the first voice to stand out among the bedlam when the Lakers came from behind to beat Boston in Game 7 of the 2010 Finals. He said simply in his stentorian way, 'Number 16.'" - Mike Bresnahan, Los Angeles Times, March 14, 2015
Did you know?
The Greek herald Stentor was known for having a voice that came through loud and clear. In fact, in the Iliad, Homer described Stentor as a man whose voice was as loud as that of fifty men together. Stentor's powerful voice made him a natural choice for delivering announcements and proclamations to the assembled Greek army during the Trojan War, and it also made his name a byword for any person with a loud, strong voice. Both the noun stentor and the related adjective stentorian pay homage to the big-voiced warrior, and both have been making noise in English since the early 17th century.
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languageword a daywebstermerriam-webstermerriamwordsvocabularydictionaryenglishword of the dayword