blare out
to be produced loudly
verb
To play (a radio, recorded music, etc.) at extremely loud volume levels.
In 2000, a robber held up a bank in San Diego, USA. It seems everyone held their noses rather than sticking their hands up because the man was so smelly! […] Police helicopters blared loudspeaker warnings about the smelly man.
To express (ideas, words, etc.) loudly; to proclaim.
[T]he world, the world, / All ear and eye, with such a stupid heart / To interpret ear and eye, and such a tongue / To blare its own interpretation— […]
To make a loud sound, especially like a trumpet.
The trumpet blaring in my ears gave me a headache.
[O]n plains, and under City-walls, innumerable regimental bands blare-off into the Inane, without note from us.
To make a lengthy sound, as of a person crying or an animal bellowing or roaring.
And the kyne wente ſtraight waye vnto Beth Semes vpon one ſtreete, and wente on blearynge, and turned nether to the righte hande ner to the lefte.
The worthies alſo of Moab bleared and cried for very ſorow of their myndes: Wo is my hert for Moabs ſake.
noun
A loud sound.
I can hardly hear you over the blare of the radio.
[T]heir host of eagles flew / Past the Pyrenean pines, / Follow'd up in valley and glen / With blare of bugle, clamour of men, / Roll of cannon and clash of arms, / And England pouring on her foes.
Of colour, light, or some other quality: dazzling, often garish, brilliance.
Archivist Camus, an Old-Constituent appointed Archivist, he and the Ancient Twelve, amid blare of military pomp and clangour, enter, bearing the divine Book: and President and all Legislative Senators, laying their hand on the same, successively take the Oath, with cheers and heart-effusion, universal three-times-three.
And we came to the Isle of Fire: we were lured by the light from afar, / For the peak sent up one league of fire to the Northern Star; / Lured by the glare and the blare, but scarcely could stand upright, / For the whole isle shudder'd and shook like a man in a mortal affright; […]
A lengthy sound, as of a person crying or an animal bellowing or roaring.
The herds [of bison], in their flight from the burning pastures had rushed over the bed of the watercourse—scaled the slopes of the banks. […] One cry alone more wild than their own savage blare pierced the reek through which the Brute Hurricane swept.