Noun
the trumpet of a flower Verb
He likes to trumpet his own achievements.
The law was trumpeted as a solution to everything.
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Noun
However when the subject went sans pants and played the bottom trumpet, the fart resulted in clumps of bacteria growing in the Petri dish.—Bruce Y. Lee, Forbes.com, 31 May 2025 Trump was greeted by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman amid the fanfare of a 21-gun salute and trumpets.—Brendan Cole
shane Croucher, MSNBC Newsweek, 13 May 2025
Verb
Merz wasted no time in trumpeting a plan to dramatically boost Germany’s role in Europe’s defense.—Ian Bremmer, Time, 24 May 2025 American diplomacy played an important role in tamping down previous conflicts over the territory in 1999 and 2019, but President Bill Clinton and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, respectively, were careful not to trumpet their interventions in those cases.—Vaibhav Vats, The Atlantic, 21 May 2025 See All Example Sentences for trumpet
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English trompette, from Anglo-French, from trumpe trump
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