1SAYto say something in a voice that is loud enough for others to hear(大声)念出/叫出等某物
Someone called out my name.
有人大声喊我的名字。
We all listened as he read the statement out loud.
他大声宣读声明的时候我们都听着。
Examples from the Corpus
read/shout etc something out (loud)• She brings her notes about it to the meeting and reads them out.• Northread it out at his trial four years later as evidence of approval, but it was all delightfully vague.• He shouts her out into the street for a harlot.• Laura listened attentively while Yoyo read the speech out loud, and in the end, her eyes were glistening too.• He read it out loud to his colleagues, quite sarcastically, expecting them to agree that it was ridiculous.• Everything I had read before turned out to be outdated.• He comes up to my room in the evenings so that I can read them out to him.• We can read the books children are reading, find out what happens in class, ask what the guidance counselor said.
2phrasal verbphr vSHOUTto say something suddenly in a loudvoice 突然大声地说
Don’t shout out the answer in class, put up your hand.
上课时回答问题不要大声喊,要举手。
Examples from the Corpus
shout out• The hand reeked of garlic-she clawed at it, her muffledshouts oozing out between the fingers.• He shouts her out into the street for a harlot.• In Paris, a taxi driver had shouted me out of his cab.• He began to shout it out with a giggle in his sore voice.