Trumpet
in sentence
95 examples of Trumpet in a sentence
Oh wait, and the
trumpet.
But, perhaps the worst part of the movie is the atrocious
trumpet
music that plays whenever Godzilla throws a temper tantrum.
The violin with a
trumpet
horn attached to it.
However, I loved the eerie atmosphere, especially in the jail cell scene, with the muted
trumpet
playing in the background and what is apparently a dead tree silhouetted against the sky seen through the high window.
Despite the social reforms the left likes to
trumpet
about Cuba, its literacy rate was higher before Castro came to power, and racism against the black population was less pervasive.
Thus he is unlikely to publicly
trumpet
the unforgiving capitalist policies of Gaidar and Chubais, even if he quietly pursues them.
(The Petri-Plummer model does indicate that the TPP will accelerate the movement of jobs from manufacturing to services, a result that the pact’s advocates do not trumpet.)
A poll of Trump supporters found that 66% believe that Obama is a Muslim, and 61% that he was not born in the US (a claim that Trump continued to
trumpet
long after it had been disproved).
Some Israeli right-wing leaders like Menachem Begin, Shamir, and Netanyahu
trumpet
their settlement achievements.
They
trumpet
the importance of science to their countries’ futures, and then identify the areas that they “uniquely” are spearheading.
Rumors suggest that the US is likely to insist on maintaining the perverse selection process in which it gets to pick the World Bank’s president, simply because, in this election year, Obama’s opponents would
trumpet
loss of control over the choice as a sign of weakness.
Where Did Market Volatility Go?Television and newspapers continue to
trumpet
every twist and turn of global financial markets.
While they claim to be redeemers of the poor and
trumpet
their readiness to fight for their “selfless” Bolivarian cause, they refuse international assistance, forcing Venezuelans either to emigrate or suffer (and, in many cases, die) from severe shortages of food, medicines, and medical supplies.
Around the world, newspapers
trumpet
a "housing bubble" about to burst.
In Japan, too, worries about Chinese assertiveness have become so powerful that a government that showed considerable hostility to the US-Japan alliance when it came to power three years ago had, by November, begun to
trumpet
the alliance’s mutual-defense commitments as it confronted China’s claim to the Senkaku (Diaoyu) Islands.
It allows him to
trumpet
Thailand’s strategic objectives and the region’s major issues, sometimes in confrontation with the interests and the demands of the West.
After all, before the meltdown in 2008, the captains of finance and industry could
trumpet
the virtues of globalization, technology, and financial liberalization, which supposedly heralded a new era of relentless growth.
And, precisely because nationalism shapes the way we think, its role in phenomena that do not
trumpet
their nationalist motivation – like Al Qaeda’s attacks in 2001 – can easily be overlooked.
Wikipedia’s boosters
trumpet
it as heralding the arrival of “Web 2.0.”
Although BJP members
trumpet
the party's fundamentalist Hindu agenda, it won power nationally on its promise to deliver good government after the seeming corruption and chaos of the Congress party's previous term in power.
Bush may
trumpet
free markets, just as Reagan did.
Hillary Clinton’s Asian AdventureNEW DELHI – On her recent trip to China, Bangladesh, and India, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was eager to
trumpet
America’s “New Silk Road” strategy, which she unveiled last September.
Unconstrained by the kinds of grassroots activism seen in, say, democratic India, China has used massive, but often opaque, construction projects to bend nature to its will and
trumpet
its rise as a great power.
Ultimately, the historical wounds that have long divided China and Japan, and the more current diplomatic flashpoints that the global media inevitably trumpet, only tell part of the Sino-Japanese story.
Then there is another “miracle” that the government is starting to trumpet, one discovered in August 2009: an increase in Russia’s population.
But Trump could
trumpet
that he had eliminated the bilateral trade deficit.
One blow to stop, two to go down, three to go up; it was unceasing, like blows of a club dominating the tumult, accompanied by the clear sound of the bell; while the lander, directing the work, increased the noise still more by shouting orders to the engine-man through a
trumpet.
He certainly considered himself brave, but he felt a disagreeable emotion at his chest amid this thunder of trains, the hollow blows of the signals, the stifled howling of the trumpet, the continual flight of those cables, unrolled and rolled at full speed by the drums of the engine.
"Here, you confounded rascals," cried Catherine in the inclined way, which was wood-lined, about a hundred metres long, and resounded like a gigantic
trumpet.
The rolling of the trams shook the metal floor, the drums were turning, unrolling the cables in the midst of cries from the trumpet, the ringing of bells, blows of the mallet on the signal block; he found the monster again swallowing his daily ration of human flesh, the cages rising and plunging, engulfing their burden of men, without ceasing, with the facile gulp of a voracious giant.
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