释义 |
out-ˈbellow, v. [out- 18, 18 c.] trans. a. To outdo in bellowing; to roar louder than. b. To overcome by bellowing or loud noise.
1623Bp. Hall Great Imposter Wks. (1625) 505 Thus Saul will lie-out his sacrilege, until the very beasts out-bleat and out-bellow him. 1807Director II. 331 To the unspeakable annoyance of the actor, whom they perhaps outbellow in some of his finest passages. 1834Fraser's Mag. X. 16 They..out-bellow bulls. 1876Swinburne Erechtheus 1340 Its clamour outbellows the thunder. |