Bedlam vs Blare - What's the difference?
bedlam | blare | Related terms |
A place or situation of chaotic uproar, and where confusion prevails.
* 1872 : , The Complete Works of John Bunyan , p 133
* 2002 : Mark L. Friedman, ''Everyday Crisis Management, p 134
(obsolete) An insane person; a lunatic; a madman.
* Shakespeare
(obsolete) A lunatic asylum; a madhouse.
* 1720 : , The works of the Most Reverend Dr. John Tillotson , p 43
(usually singular) A loud sound.
*'>citation
Dazzling, often garish, brilliance.
To make a loud sound.
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=December 14
, author=Andrew Khan
, title=How isolationist is British pop?
, work=the Guardian
To cause to sound like the blare of a trumpet; to proclaim loudly.
* Tennyson
Bedlam is a related term of blare.
As nouns the difference between bedlam and blare
is that bedlam is a place or situation of chaotic uproar, and where confusion prevails while blare is (usually singular) a loud sound.As a verb blare is
to make a loud sound.bedlam
English
Noun
(en noun)- Some of the wards were veritable "bedlams ," and dis-charged patients have told of abuses practiced in them of which the mere recital causes a shudder.
- The outside of the Hyatt was bedlam . There was a group of more than a hundred injured people on the circular drive in front of the hotel.
- Let's get the bedlam to lead him.
- But if any man should profess to believe these things, and yet allow himself in any known wickedness, such a one should be put into bedlam.
References
*Anagrams
* * *blare
English
Noun
(en noun)- I can hardly hear you over the blare of the radio.
Verb
- The trumpet blaring in my ears gave me a headache.
citation, page= , passage=France, even after 30 years of extraordinary synth, electro and urban pop, is still beaten with a stick marked "Johnny Hallyday" by otherwise sensible journalists. Songs that have taken Europe by storm, from the gloriously bleak Belgian disco of Stromae's Alors on Danse to Sexion d'Assaut's soulful Desole blare from cars everywhere between Lisbon and Lublin but run aground as soon as they hit Dover. }}
- To blare its own interpretation.