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Definition of Loud-voiced
1. Adjective. Having an unusually loud voice.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Loud-voiced
Literary usage of Loud-voiced
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Wessex by Clive Holland (1906)
"drum-thumping, cymbal-banging, and loud-voiced en treaties, ... There used v be
also the loud-voiced, red-faced, and jolly-looking gentlemen who, ..."
2. The Odyssey of Homer by Homer, William Morris (1887)
"... loud-voiced in the battle-play, E'en now from the bed arisen where the
fair-haired Helen lay; But when the loved son of Odysseus of Atreus' son had ..."
3. Societies of the Plains Indians by Clark Wissler (1916)
"Also, a man who has been wounded sings, "Ho, loud-voiced-hawk, ... So they stand
side by side at the tipi door of loud-voiced-hawk and sing songs. ..."
4. The Yale Literary Magazine by Lyman Hotchkiss Bagg, Yale University (1887)
"But rather, a loud-voiced, ranting wild-man, who raves about the attic like a
whirlwind, ... Did it go out with coarse, loud-voiced ravings upon his lips ? ..."
5. The Electrical Engineer (1891)
"The principal objection to local authorities doing business is they are apt to
perpetrate jobs. Sume loud-voiced councillor names his friend whom he knows ..."
6. Folklore by Folklore Society (Great Britain) (1892)
"... son of Ith, when she went with Geide the loud-voiced. In his reign everyone
in Erin deemed another's voice sweeter than strings of lutes would be, ..."