Murmur
11murmur — index speak Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 murmur …
12múrmur — s. m. [Linguagem poética] Murmúrio. ‣ Etimologia: latim murmur, uris …
13murmur — [n] low, continuous sound babble, buzz, buzzing, drone, grumble, hum, humming, mumble, murmuration, mutter, muttering, purr, rumble, rumor, undertone, whisper, whispering; concepts 65,595 murmur [v] make low, continuous sound babble, burble, buzz …
14murmur — ► NOUN 1) a quietly spoken utterance. 2) a low continuous background noise. 3) a subdued complaint. 4) Medicine a recurring sound heard in the heart through a stethoscope and usually indicating disease or damage. ► VERB 1) say something in a… …
15MURMUR — apud Stat. Theb. l. 4. v. 414. ubi Infera Sacra describuntur. Lethaeaque sacra, Et mersum Ismeni subter confinia ponto Miscentis, parat ante ducem circumque bidentum Visceribus laceris, et odori sulfuris aura, Graminibusque novis et longô murmure …
16murmur — m. murmure …
17murmur — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 sound of words that are spoken quietly ADJECTIVE ▪ dull, faint, low, quiet, slight, soft ▪ general ▪ a …
18murmur — mur|mur1 [ˈmə:mə US ˈmə:rmər] v 1.) [I and T] to say something in a soft quiet voice that is difficult to hear clearly ▪ Well done, murmured George. ▪ The girl murmured something polite, and smiled. ▪ Julie turned over and murmured in her sleep.… …
19murmur — {{11}}murmur (n.) late 14c., expression of discontent by grumbling, from O.Fr. murmure murmur, sound of human voices; trouble, argument (12c.), noun of action from murmurer to murmur, from L. murmurare to murmur, mutter, from murmur (n.) a hum,… …
20murmur — [[t]mɜ͟ː(r)mə(r)[/t]] murmurs, murmuring, murmured 1) VERB If you murmur something, you say it very quietly, so that not many people can hear what you are saying. [V n to n] He turned and murmured something to the professor... [V n] She murmured… …