单词 | declare |
释义 | de·clare transitive verb 1. obsolete < I told this unto the magicians but there was none that could declare it to me — Gen 41:24 (Authorized Version) > 2. < reaffirm on this wider basis the truths which other writers … have already declared — Herbert Read > : announce, proclaim, or publish especially by a formal statement or official pronouncement < we declared rubber a strategic and critical material — W.R.Langdon > < an armistice is called, peace is declared — Harrison Forman > : communicate to others < here the results of research are presented, here the progress of knowledge is declared — Bernard De Voto > 3. < a glimpse of his head in outline … declared his present state of mind — Osbert Sitwell > 4. < declare a trust > 5. < others declare that the rains on the mountain sides … caused the disaster — C.L.Jones > : affirm, assert < happy the country that has no history, declares the proverb — E.H.Collis > 6. a. b. 7. 8. in card games a. b. 9. of a cricket team 10. < declared an extra dividend for the fourth quarter > intransitive verb 1. < poetry … evokes rather than merely declares — C.S.Kilby > as a. in card games (1) (2) b. of a cricket team 2. < one of the first papers in New England to declare for Jackson — H.K.Beale > < declared against the ancient languages as the staple of American education — Howard M. Jones > Synonyms: < the visitor declared that it was his intention to leave early > < the court declared that the interim measures of protection … had ceased to operate — Americana Annual > To announce is to declare for the first time, especially something presumably of interest < to announce one's arrival > < to announce an engagement > < to announce a new government economic policy > To publish is to make public, now generally by means of printing < they may only want to find the Monarchists in a thoroughly compromising position and publish it to the world — John Buchan > < if the national government resolves upon some drastic action at ten o'clock it publishes the decree at eleven — L.C.Douglas > To advertise in its most general sense is to call public attention to by widely circulated statements, sometimes with unpleasant publicity or extravagance of statement < deliberately advertising his willingness to make concessions — Time > < permanent residents also aided materially in advertising the territory — R.A.Billington > < to advertise one's products in newspapers, on the radio, and on television > To proclaim is to announce usually orally and loudly and with conclusiveness in a public place or to people at large < to proclaim the day a national holiday > < to proclaim the independence of the nation > < to proclaim one's innocence in the face of public disbelief > To promulgate is to make known to all concerned something that has binding force (as a dogma of the church) or something for which adherents are sought (as a theory or a doctrine) < regulations promulgated by executive order — Americana Annual > < promulgates a brand of heaven-on-earth religion — John Kobler > To broadcast is to make known in all directions over a large area, now commonly by radio or television < the book he has written to broadcast this conviction — Gordon Harrison > < to broadcast the news every hour on the hour > Synonym: see in addition assert. • - declare oneself |
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