klaxon
Apparence
Pandôo
[Sepe]klaxon \ˈklæks(ə)n\
- (Kutukutu) pîpî
- And she went so swiftly that he could only follow her to the door. The large shape of the car swallowed her up; and the car twisted softly around the little drive and away to the London road. Minutes later he heard its Klaxon, just one sharp keen, like the harsh cry of a sea-bird. … — (“3/5/1” na Michael Arlen, “Piracy”: A Romantic Chronicle of These Days , London, W. Collins Sons & Co., 1922, lêmbëtï 188)
- There was a motor car behind them now and it blasted into the truck noise and the dust with its klaxon again and again; then flashed on lights that showed the dust like a solid yellow cloud and surged past them in a whining rise of gears and a demanding, threatening, bludgeoning of klaxoning. — (Ernest Hemingway, For Whom the Bell Tolls , Charles Scribner’s Sons, 21 Ngberere 1940, chapitre 42)
- Irenka was up front using the lavatory when the lights in the cabin went red and the klaxon sounded over the speakers. — (Brad R. Torgersen, Into the New Millennium: Trailblazing Tales from Analog Science Fiction and Fact , Norwalk, Dell Magazines, Nabändüru 2010, volume CXXX, numéro 11, lêmbëtï 84)
Pandôo
[Sepe]klaxon \sêndagô ?\ linô kôlï
Âlïndïpa
[Sepe]- Musanji Ngalasso-Mwatha, Bakarî Farânzi – Lingäla – Sängö , 2013, OIF/ELAN/Présence africaine