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cry havoc
Idioms and Phrases
Sound an alarm or warning, as in In his sermon the pastor cried havoc to the congregation's biases against gays . The noun havoc was once a command for invaders to begin looting and killing the defenders' town. Shakespeare so used it in Julius Caesar (3:1): “Cry 'Havoc' and let slip the dogs of war.” By the 19th century the phrase had acquired its present meaning.Example Sentences
Cry havoc and let slip the Barbz of war.
They must have known those they had abandoned would cry havoc.
Dallas Children’s Theater served up a trio of Idris Goodwin plays about race, while the youth company Cry Havoc presented its climate change project, called “Endlings.”
Michael Signer, then mayor of Charlottesville, worked mightily, as his book “Cry Havoc” makes clear, to try to avert the white supremacist standoff that took the life of Heather Heyer and tarnished the name of his town.
“Cry ‘Havoc!,’ and let slip the dogs of war,” commands Mark Antony in Act III, Scene 1.
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More About Cry Havoc
What doescry havoc mean?
Cry havoc means to raise an alarm or give a warning.
The word havoc means chaos, disorder, or confusion. It can also mean destruction, damage, or ruin. In many cases, it refers to a combination of these things. The phrases wreak havoc, play havoc, and raise havoc mean to cause chaos or destruction or both.
Cry havoc, though, means to warn others, perhaps when something destructive (havoc) may or is about to happen.
While havoc is associated with seriously destructive and chaotic situations, such as natural disasters, it can be used in a range of situations: a hurricane can cause havoc throughout a region, while a strong gust of wind can wreak havoc on your hair.
The phrase cry havoc can be used in an even broader range of contexts. Crying havoc can involve a warning about something like a potential disaster, but it can also involve many other things, such as warning for someone to change their behavior.
Example: We need to cry havoc and warn people about the dangers that our democracy faces.
Where doescry havoc come from?
The first records of the phrase cry havoc come from around the 1400s, and its origin is closely tied with that of the word havoc. Havoc comes from the Old French havot, meaning “to pillage” (to violently loot and plunder a place, especially during a war). In Anglo-French, the spelling havok was used in the phrase crier havok, meaning “to cry havoc.”
This refers to the practice of a military commander shouting “Havoc!” as a command to start pillaging. Shakespeare uses it this way in Julius Caesar: “Cry ‘Havoc!’, and let slip the dogs of war.” Eventually, cry havoc took on a new meaning: “to sound the alarm”—maybe because havoc is coming. (The phrase dogs of war also has a metaphorical meaning—it refers to the chaos that war brings.)
Did you know ... ?
What are some other forms related to cry havoc?
- havocked (past tense verb)
- havocking (continuous tense verb)
- havocker (noun)
What are some synonyms for cry havoc?
- sound the alarm
- raise the alarm
- give warning
What are some words that share a root or word element with cry havoc?
What are some words that often get used in discussing cry havoc?
How iscry havoc used in real life?
When people say cry havoc, they are often referencing the line from Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar: “Cry ‘Havoc!’, and let slip the dogs of war.” But the phrase can be used in many different contexts.
I've been asking you to cry havoc, and you have been crying havoc. But I think there are some in the back who are still pretending they can't hear us.
— Alexandra Erin (@AlexandraErin)
A disturbance in the Force…as if a subtitle has been announced for the next Star Wars movie, and fandom is crying havoc.
— Dayton Ward (@daytonward)
Current mood: Crying havoc.
— The Omnipresent Hum of Stars Dead and Distant (@PureGreySilence)
Try usingcry havoc!
Which of the following phrases is a synonym of cry havoc?
A. wreak havoc
B. raise havoc
C. play havoc
D. none of the above
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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