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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

Someone stood in the doorway blowing a shrill whistle, then there was again the clamour of a claxon near at hand.

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