"... he gave orders in a stentorian voice that carried the assumption of command."

Oct 25, 2007 10:16


Word of the Day for Thursday, October 25, 2007
stentorian \sten-TOR-ee-uhn\, adjective:

Extremely loud.

Around his family, Sergeant Charles Mingus Sr. was easily angered and often violent and closemouthed the rest of the time, except when he gave orders in a stentorian voice that carried the assumption of command.
-- Gene Santoro, Myself When I Am Real

He broke the tradition of stentorian tenors, whose big voices and melodramatic high notes were needed to fill the concert halls and vaudeville houses.
-- Richard Corliss, "The Book on Bing Crosby", Time, May 17, 2001

Then a stentorian voice blared an all-points bulletin: "Calling the G-men! Calling all Americans to war on the underworld!"
-- Strobe Talbott, "Resisting the Gangbusters Option", Time, October 15, 1990

The bearded, often curmudgeonly Knoller can be found in the press filing center on most every presidential trip, his stentorian voice booming out 35-second takes for radio -- as many as 20 a day -- and shaping the day's news for dozens of journalists who can't help but hear him.
-- Dana Milbank, "Bush by the Numbers, as Told by a Diligent Scorekeeper", Washington Post, September 3, 2002

Stentorian comes from Stentor, a Greek herald in the Trojan War. According to Homer's Iliad, his voice was as loud as that of fifty men combined.

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