susurration

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'If I were going to be here next session, I should take them For some minutes after the Professor's return to his seat a susurration was audible throughout the hall; bonnets bent together, and beards exchanged curt comments The ceremony, as is usual with all ceremonies, grew wearisome before its end.

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Definitions (5)

Toggle American Heritage definitions American Heritage Dictionary (1)

  1. noun A soft, whispering or rustling sound; a murmur.

Toggle Century definitions Century Dictionary (1)

Toggle GNU Webster definitions GNU Webster's 1913 (1)

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Examples (13)

  • There had been an almost inaudible susurration, so low that they hadn't been aware of it until it ceased. —  AnalogSFF,January-February2008
  • A soft wind stirred the branches high above them, creating a regular sighing that Dale found as calming as the susurration of ocean surf. —  AWinterHaunting
  • 'If I were going to be here next session, I should take them For some minutes after the Professor's return to his seat a susurration was audible throughout the hall; bonnets bent together, and beards exchanged curt comments The ceremony, as is usual with all ceremonies, grew wearisome before its end. —  Born in Exile
  • Sand and sea teem with vitality;--over all the dunes there is a constant susurration, a blattering and swarming of crustacea;--through all the sea there is a ceaseless play of silver lightning,--flashing of myriad fish. —  Chita: a Memory of Last Island
  • The canes do not utter a single susurration. —  Two Years in the French West Indies
 

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Roget's II Roget's II: The New Thesaurus

Used in the same context Used in the Same Context

soughing ·  drip-drip ·  chirruping ·  susurrus ·  honking ·  swishing ·  shush ·  buffetings ·  dreamily ·  hushing ·  leucocyte ·  chirr
Roget's II: The New Thesaurus, Third Edition by the Editors of the American Heritage® Dictionary. Copyright © 2003, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Etymologies (2)

Toggle American Heritage etymologies American Heritage Dictionary (1)

  1. Middle English susurracioun, from Late Latin susurrātiō, susurrātiōn-, from Latin susurrātus, past participle of susurrāre, to whisper, from susurrus, whisper, ultimately of imitative origin.

Toggle Century etymologies Century Dictionary (1)

  1. = French susurration = Spanish susurracion = Italian susurrazione, from Late Latin susurratio(n-), a whispering, from Latin susurrare, murmur, whisper: see susurrant.
 

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/sjusəˈreɪʃən/
by American Heritage

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