herald 的 2 个定义
- a royal or official messenger, especially one representing a monarch in an ambassadorial capacity during wartime.
- a person or thing that precedes or comes before; forerunner; harbinger: the returning swallows, those heralds of spring.
- a person or thing that proclaims or announces: A good newspaper should be a herald of truth.
- (5)
- to give news or tidings of; announce; proclaim: a publicity campaign to herald a new film.
- to indicate or signal the coming of; usher in.
herald 近义词
omen, messenger
bring message
更多herald例句
- He saw NuWeld as a herald of the “millions of millions of new high-paying jobs” that fracking could bring.
- With any luck, it may be a herald of things to come as the sport's organizers explore the potential for a US series in the next few years.
- Check: “This atom smashing business is going to herald the final victory of the machine.”
- The Herald asked her to be a freelance reporter, but not because of her notorious status.
- One of the reporters from New York was Herbert Bayard Swope, then of the Herald.
- Foss occasionally supplied pulpits in Baltimore and its suburbs, to the derision of the Herald agnostics.
- A smaller headline in the Herald Tribune stated that Black September, headed by Ali Salameh, had taken credit for the operation.
- Ike had read the "Herald," with all about "the great prize fight" in it, and had become entirely carried away with it.
- The announcements of the meets in this and adjoining counties appear regularly in the Midland Counties' Herald.
- Voices sounded behind him, and with them a great glare of ruddy light came to herald the arrival of his men.
- Therefore the Herald is going to print that wild story of Hunt's to-night and comment upon the audacity of the scheme.
- Then a herald made sure that neither knight had fastened himself to his saddle.