Langimage
English

wrongly-proclaimed

|wrong-ly-pro-claimed|

C1

🇺🇸

/ˈrɔːŋli prəˈkleɪmd/

🇬🇧

/ˈrɒŋli prəˈkleɪmd/

(proclaim)

announce publicly

Base FormPlural3rd Person Sing.PastPast ParticiplePresent ParticipleNounNounAdjectiveAdjectiveAdjectiveAdverb
proclaimproclamationsproclaimsproclaimedproclaimedproclaimingproclamationproclaimersunfairly-proclaimedproclaimedproclamatoryproclamatorily
Etymology
Etymology Information

'proclaim' originates from Latin, specifically the word 'proclamare,' where 'pro-' meant 'forth' and 'clamare' meant 'to shout.'

Historical Evolution

'proclamare' transformed into the Old French word 'proclamer,' and eventually became the modern English word 'proclaim' through Middle English.

Meaning Changes

Initially, it meant 'to shout forth,' but over time it evolved into its current meaning of 'to declare publicly or officially.'

Meanings by Part of Speech

Adjective 1

declared or announced incorrectly or falsely.

The artifact was wrongly-proclaimed as an ancient relic.

Synonyms

Antonyms

accurately-proclaimedcorrectly-announced

Last updated: 2025/05/24 11:26