2. Verb. (third-person singular of megaphone) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Megaphones
1. megaphone [v] - See also: megaphone
Lexicographical Neighbors of Megaphones
Literary usage of Megaphones
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Nautical Almanac by Riggs & Brother, Philadelphia (1901)
"2r, 30-inch 1.50 12-inch Junior 25 20-inch " 50 Stentor megaphones are made ...
All metal parts are brass, nickel plated, so that Stentor megaphones can be ..."
2. Compressed Air Information; Or, A Cyclopedia Containing Practical Papers on by William Lawrence Saunders (1903)
"megaphones IN FOG SIGNALING. Lighthouse Board Experimenting With New System for
... It consists of eight megaphones, ten feet long, each directed to a ..."
3. Compressed Air Information: Or, A Cyclopedia Containing Practical Papers on by W[illiam] L[awrence] Saunders (1903)
"megaphones IN FOG SIGNALING. Lighthouse Board Experimenting With New System for
... It consists of eight megaphones, ten feet long, each directed to a ..."
4. St. Nicholas by Mary Mapes Dodge (1906)
"Roy and Hadden and Cole were to lead the cheering and to this end had armed
themselves with brown megaphones; and coats were discarded, while on the seats ..."
5. South Eastern Reporter by West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, West Publishing Company, South Carolina Supreme Court (1905)
"Criers or "spielers" will be stationed in front of each tent, show, stand, or
booth, who, by the use of horns, megaphones, bells, drums, ..."