different between proclaim vs outask
proclaim
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Old French proclamer, from Latin pr?cl?m?, pr?cl?m?re, from pr?- (“forth”) + cl?m? (“to shout, cry out”). Spelling altered by influence of claim, from the same Latin source (cl?m?).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /p?o??kle?m/
- Rhymes: -e?m
- Hyphenation: pro?claim
Verb
proclaim (third-person singular simple present proclaims, present participle proclaiming, simple past and past participle proclaimed)
- To announce or declare.
Synonyms
- (to announce or declare): disclose, make known; See also Thesaurus:announce
Derived terms
- proclaimed district
- self-proclaimed
Related terms
Translations
Anagrams
- picloram
proclaim From the web:
- what proclaim means
- what proclaimed the start of the french revolution
- what proclaimers song is in shrek
- what proclaims arthur king of the britons
- what proclaimed offender
- proclaimed meaning in hindi
- what proclaim means in the bible
- proclaimers what do you do
outask
English
Etymology
From out- +? ask. Cognate with Old Frisian utaskia (“to outask”), Danish udæske (“to challenge”).
Verb
outask (third-person singular simple present outasks, present participle outasking, simple past and past participle outasked)
- (transitive) To ask or proclaim for the last time.
- (transitive) To announce or publish the banns of marriage of (a couple) in church for the third time.
Anagrams
- Atsuko, Otsuka, ask out, otakus
outask From the web:
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