sang
IPA: sˈæŋ
Root Word: Sang
noun
- A surname from Chinese.
- A surname from Korean.
- A surname from Khmer.
- Alternative form of sheng (“Chinese wind instrument”) [A Chinese wind instrument, a free-reed mouth organ consisting of 13 or more bamboo pipes of various lengths, which are fixed at their bases in a wind chest made from a dried gourd (or, more recently, wood or chrome-plated brass).]
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Examples of "sang" in Sentences
- Meanwhile, McCain sang a much different tune in the ethnic media.
- The Andrews Sisters sang from the radio in the dust shafted kitchen.
- "The Lassus scholars from Dublin sang the O quam gloriosum to great effect and concluded with a Te Deum by Lassus."
- She came in eighth, but she learned much more than how to spell—which was good, since she went out on the word sang.
- On Frege's view, the proposition that Mary sang has a functional component indicated by ˜sang™, and an argument indicated by
- Considering the context in which it's used, "sang" is not really meant as a "good" thing, just as grief is rarely good in any situation.
- But the Greek poets sang their own verses: "Homer literally _sang_ the wrath of Achilles, and the woes of Greece;" would it were so in England.
- The rest of the waterlogged stage will likely be trashed, but the circle, where Hank Williams, Johnny Cash, Patsy Cline and other greats stood and sang, is irreplaceable.
- Like native Americans, Tibetans burn sagebrush which we call sang ganden khampa, as a purifying ritual and a smoke offering to the Buddha and the old gods yul-lha ship-dag of Tibet.
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