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claxon

American  
[klak-suhn] / ˈklæk sən /

noun

  1. klaxon.


Etymology

Origin of claxon

Naturalized English spelling

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

By now we have all “heard delirium in a claxon, / Seen revelation lit on chromium.”

From Los Angeles Times • Apr. 11, 2023

I had a kind of Austin Powers claxon: “Wanh-anhh! We can’t do that, because he’d run the gag dry.”

From Los Angeles Times • Jan. 27, 2022

But now their sound was an enervating jangle, a burglar-alarm claxon.

From New York Times • Aug. 5, 2012

An army deuce-and-a-half rolled by, claxon blaring, three dozen faces peering from the back and five more Vietnamese sitting on the hood.

From Time Magazine Archive

Faint above the incessant throbbing of explosions, the sound of a claxon horn.

From One Man's Initiation—1917 by Dos Passos, John

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