View example sentences and word forms for Blared.
Blared meaning
simple past and past participle of blare
Example sentences (20)
In Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem, some Palestinian residents cheered and blew their car horns as sirens blared.
Israeli air defences "intercepted a hostile aircraft" from Lebanon after sirens blared in the northern town of Zarit, the army said.
It got really quiet, then it got really loud," Scott said afterward, as chainsaws roared and sirens blared in the area.
That’s the official Russian view, blared out constantly on Russia state media.
Yosef's family told that he was at a synagogue while on weekend leave from his mandatory military service, which he only had five months left of, when sirens warning of the Hamas attack blared.
As sirens belatedly blared across the landscape, some 240 Japanese aircraft terrorised the defence-critical NT centre over two raids and more than three hours.
At the count of six, the Final Countdown music blared on the speakers.
Next to the Uranus, a digital sign on another building blared, "Don't give up!
Sirens warning of incoming fire blared overnight in northern Israel, the military said, with no reports of casualties.
There was a guy who blared Donald Trump’s campaign tunes from a vehicle, inside the 150-yard zone where electioneering is prohibited.
The situation got scary Saturday when an Alberta-wide blared across smartphones, TVs and radios.
A handful of local politicians and officials were at the airport to greet the teams, as loud hip-hop music blared through the maintenance hangar that was being used for the arrivals.
By the next day, public sympathy was on his side as news outlets blared headlines about the mayor who used a gun to bully the city’s freshest-faced politician.
I blared death metal as loud as the car speakers could handle.
Music blared out of tall speakers.
Some whirled "Terrible Towels", a particular sort of Pittsburgh Steelers gear; drivers, in cars draped in Biden signs and even a colloquial "Yinzer for Biden" banner, blared their horns in appreciation.
A siren loudly blared as the intro to Beyonce’s “Formation” played and Freedia stood center stage, controlling the room with the progression of each verse.
Flags and signs waved as a loudspeaker blared the catchy campaign jingle of the Broad Front.
Outside the vehicle, a disembodied voice, recorded by the God is Great Drivers Union at the Accra Mall tro-tro station, blared from a speaker.
Security alarms running on independent electricity supplies blared into life at homes and businesses because the loss of power was thought to signal thieves breaking in.