Blared vs Flared - What's the difference?
blared | flared |
(blare)
(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
(flare)
A source of brightly burning light or intense heat used to attract attention in an emergency, to illuminate an area, or as a decoy.
* 2010 , James Fleming, Cold Blood
*:...when the soldiers openly laughed at him, I knew he was in the bag. While he was putting on the snowplough, the Whites shot up a flare to see what was happening.
*, chapter=7
, title= A widening of an object with an otherwise roughly constant width.
* 2003 , Timothy Noakes, Lore of Running , page 270:
(aviation) The transition from downward flight to level flight just before landing.
(baseball) A low fly ball that is hit in the region between the infielders and the outfielders
A type of pyrotechnic that produces a brilliant light or intense heat without an explosion. A colored flare used as a warning on the railroad, a fusee.
To blaze brightly.
To burn unsteadily.
(intransitive) To open outward in shape.
To cause to burn.
To shine out with a sudden and unsteady light; to emit a dazzling or painfully bright light.
To shine out with gaudy colours; to be offensively bright or showy.
* Shakespeare
(obsolete) To be exposed to too much light.
* Prior
As verbs the difference between blared and flared
is that blared is (blare) while flared is (flare).blared
English
Verb
(head)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.
Anagrams
* * * ----flared
English
Verb
(head)Anagrams
* *flare
English
Noun
(en noun)The Mirror and the Lamp, passage=The turmoil went on—no rest, no peace. […] It was nearly eleven o'clock now, and he strolled out again. In the little fair created by the costers' barrows the evening only seemed beginning; and the naphtha flares made one's eyes ache, the men's voices grated harshly, and the girls' faces saddened one.}}
- The flare on the inside of the shoe resists ankle pronation;
Derived terms
* lens flare * nonflared * parachute flare * unflaredVerb
- The blast furnace flared in the night.
- The candle flared in a sudden draught.
- The cat flared its nostrils while sniffing at the air.
- The cat's nostrils flared when it sniffed at the air.
- The building flared from the third through the seventh floors to occupy the airspace over the entrance plaza.
- The sides of a bowl flare .
- With ribbons pendant, flaring about her head.
- flaring in sunshine all the day