Noun
the trumpet of a flower Verb
He likes to trumpet his own achievements.
The law was trumpeted as a solution to everything.
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Noun
Hershberger lived in Gladstone and taught orchestra at Oak Park High School and Antioch Middle School in the North Kansas City School District, the district confirmed, playing the trumpet in his spare time.—Ilana Arougheti, Kansas City Star, 15 June 2026 Heartfelt salutes trumpet ebullient activism.—Voice Of The People, New York Daily News, 14 June 2026
Verb
Unsurprisingly, the Obama Presidential Center trumpets the achievements of President Barack Obama and does not focus on what he did not get done, nor, indeed, what got rolled back by subsequent administrations, which is a great deal.—The Editorial Board, Chicago Tribune, 14 June 2026 Officials have in the past touted the 77th Street gang unit as one of the department’s best, trumpeting its arrests and seizures of gun and drugs on social media.—Los Angeles Times, 4 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for trumpet
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English trompette, from Anglo-French, from trumpe trump