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Definition of declaim verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

declaim

verb
 
/dɪˈkleɪm/
 
/dɪˈkleɪm/
[transitive, intransitive] (formal)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they declaim
 
/dɪˈkleɪm/
 
/dɪˈkleɪm/
he / she / it declaims
 
/dɪˈkleɪmz/
 
/dɪˈkleɪmz/
past simple declaimed
 
/dɪˈkleɪmd/
 
/dɪˈkleɪmd/
past participle declaimed
 
/dɪˈkleɪmd/
 
/dɪˈkleɪmd/
-ing form declaiming
 
/dɪˈkleɪmɪŋ/
 
/dɪˈkleɪmɪŋ/
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  1. to say something loudly; to speak loudly and with force about something you feel strongly about, especially in public
    • declaim something She declaimed the famous opening speech of the play.
    • declaim against something He declaimed against the evils of alcohol.
    • declaim that… She stood up and loudly declaimed that prizes are not important.
    • + speech ‘All the world's a stage,’ he declaimed.
    Word Originlate Middle English: from French déclamer or Latin declamare, from de- (expressing thoroughness) + clamare ‘to shout’.
See declaim in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
previously
adverb
 
 
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