exclaim
1Exclaim! — Editor in Chief James Keast Categories Music Film Reviews Entertainment Frequency Monthly …
2Exclaim — Ex*claim , v. t. & i. [imp. & p. p. {Exclaimed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Exclaiming}.] [L. exclamare, exclamatum; ex + clamare to cry out; cf. OF. exclamer. See {Clam}.] To cry out from earnestness or passion; to utter with vehemence; to call out or… …
3Exclaim! — Exclaim!, ou !*@#, est un journal canadien de langue anglaise spécialisé dans la musique, particulièrement la musique indépendante. Il est publié mensuellement, à raison de 11 mois par année. Son tirage est de 100 mille copies. Le journal,… …
4Exclaim — Ex*claim , n. Outcry; clamor. [Archaic] [1913 Webster] Cursing cries and deep exclaims. Shak. [1913 Webster] …
5exclaim — index interject, observe (remark), proclaim Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
6exclaim — (v.) 1560s, back formation from exclamation or else from M.Fr. exclamer (16c.), from L. exclamare cry out loud, from ex intensive prefix out (see EX (Cf. ex )) + clamare cry, shout, call (see CLAIM (Cf. claim) (v.)). Spelling influenced by claim …
7exclaim — [v] shout out assert, bellow, blurt, burst out, call, call aloud, call out, cry, cry out, declare, ejaculate, emit, figure, holler, proclaim, rend the air*, roar, say loudly, shout, state, utter, vociferate, yawp*, yell; concepts 47,49 Ant. be… …
8exclaim — ► VERB ▪ cry out suddenly, especially in surprise, anger, or pain. DERIVATIVES exclamation noun exclamatory adjective. ORIGIN Latin exclamare, from clamare to shout …
9exclaim — [ek sklām′, iksklām′] vi., vt. [Fr exclamer < L exclamare < ex , out + clamare, to cry, shout: see CLAMOR] to cry out; speak or say suddenly and vehemently, as in surprise, anger, etc. exclaimer n …
10EXCLAIM — The EXtensible Cross Linguistic Automatic Information Machine (EXCLAIM) is an integrated tool for cross language information retrieval (CLIR), created at the University of California, Santa Cruz in early 2006. It is currently in a beta stage of… …