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full-throated
[ fool-throh-tid ]
adjective
- using the full power of one’s voice:
His full-throated yodeling stole the show.
- (of a sound) formed by the full power of one’s voice:
The play begins with a full-throated scream from backstage.
- demonstrated or expressed with enthusiastic conviction:
The local nurses association has given our candidate its full-throated endorsement.
Other 51³Ô¹Ï Forms
- ´Ú³Ü±ô±ô-³Ù³ó°ù´Ç²¹³Ù·±ð»å·±ô²â adverb
51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins
Origin of full-throated1
Example Sentences
Who better to help the president’s full-throated embrace of capital punishment than one of America’s most infamous alleged killers?
But there is no doubt that the most full-throated appreciation comes when Does This Train Stop On Merseyside? is played to a home crowd that knows the city and feels about it the way Prowse himself does.
What does a 2025 equivalent look like, in a party whose leaders can barely summon a full-throated defense of Mahmoud Khalil—let alone share the stage with “from the river to the sea†at a protest?
AOC’s full-throated response to the Trump administration is a stark contrast to how her party has been handling Trump 2.0.
The left would be wise to use a full-throated defense of federal workers an opportunity to portray Donald Trump, Musk, Ramaswamy and the entire GOP as cruel and unconcerned with actual working people.
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