0
Andrei Posted 21 years ago
Grammar

Ring with cheers

0 Susan Hibbert was one of the first people to know that World War II in Europe was over. 02br
02br
00Long before the countries that had been locked in the struggle against Nazi Germany rang with cheers of victory, Susan, a young sergeant based in the French town of Reims, quietly celebrated with Veuve Clicquot champagne served in a tin cup. 02br
02br
00In May 1945, Susan was a British sergeant in the Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) based at General Dwight D Eisenhower's temporary HQ - a small redbrick schoolhouse in north-eastern France. 02br
02br
00Early in the morning on 7 May, in a windowless room in the corner of the building, Susan witnessed history being made: the full capitulation of all Nazi forces. 02br
02br
00As a secretary for the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF), she had played an essential role - typing and retyping the final surrender document for 20 hours. 02br
02br
05000 02br
00-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 02br
02br
00What is the meaning of 'rang with cheers of victory' in the above? 02br
02br
00Ring false, ring a bell, ring the changes, ring the bell, ring true etc. exist as far as I am concerned. I don't know the meaning of ring with cheers. 02br
02br
00Your thoughts, please. 0230hrefhttp://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4497947.stm
  

Top answer

0 Hello, Andrei! 02br 02br 00I have just consulted with my concise oxford dictionary, and there is written as follows: 02br 02br 00ring /intransitive/ (usually followed by with, to) (of a place) resound or be permeated with a sound. 02br 02br 00I understand it as "be highly excited" "be seething with cheers".

  • 0 Hello, Andrei!
  • 02br 02br 00I have just consulted with my concise oxford dictionary, and there is written as follows: 02br 02br 00ring /intransitive/ (usually followed by with, to) (of a place) resound or be permeated with a sound.
  • 02br 02br 00I understand it as "be highly excited" "be seething with cheers".
  • 02br 02br 00I am not so good at English.
  • Did I realize your question properly?
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

10 Answers
0
0 Hello, Andrei! 02br
02br
00I have just consulted with my concise oxford dictionary, and there is written as follows: 02br
02br
00ring /intransitive/ (usually followed by with, to) (of a place) resound or be permeated with a sound. 02br
02br
00I understand it as "be highly excited" "be seething with cheers". 02br
02br
0
0 "Ring with" is an idiom which means "filled with". Your sentence, 02br
02br
00"Long before the countries ............. rang with cheers of victory, Susan, ............ tin cup. " 02br
02br
00can be rewritten as, 02br
02br
00"Long before the countries ............. WERE FILLED WITH cheers of victory, Susan, ............ tin cup. "
0
0 There seems to be a mixture of two idioms here: 02br
02br
001. "To ring with something" 02br
02br
00Cf. Longfellow's Hiawatha: 02br
02br
00'...And they laughed till all the forest 02br
00Rang with their unseemly laughter...' 02br
02br
00Usually 'ring with XYZ' requires an enclosed or semi-enclosed space
0
0 An uncomfortable situation indeed. 0-
0
0 To MrPedantic, 02br
02br
00I quote two examples from the OED:- 02br
02br
00a) The playground RANG WITH children's shouts. 02br
02br
00b) The village RANG WITH the joy of Christmas. 02br
02br
00(Example ' b ' is similar to "the countries rang with cheers of victory", or is it not?) 0-
0
0 Hello temico, thanks for checking! 02br
02br
00Playgrounds can indeed ring with children's shouts; I would say that these generally resound from the asphalt surface and/or enclosing walls. 02br
02br
00Example b) seems slightly more complex than the 'cheers of victory'. For instance, 'rang with the joy of Christmas' could refer to the bells of the village
0
0 01blockquote
00(But maybe I'm being over-critical.) 12blockquote
12br
02br
02br
00Nay - never say so, Mr. P. Surely the welkins would ring to hear such words![A] 0-
0
0 I thought the correspondent had a slightly shaky grasp of history too... 0-
0
0 ('Shaky grasp'??) 0-
0
0 Let's hope she didn't spill the "Veuve Clicquot champagne served in a tin cup" . 02br
02br
00I'm not sure that an over firm grasp is required for romanticism. 050010id5

Related Questions