Macbeth, Act 1 Scene 6
She berates the servant who brought the news. "Thou'rt mad to say it." Then she gloats. "The raven himself is hoarse who croaks the fatal entrance of Duncan under my battlements."
This is the reference to a bird in Macbeth, Act 1, Scene 5: "The raven himself is hoarse That croaks the fatal entrance of Duncan Under my battlements." Ravens have many symbolic meanings, both positive and negative, but in this case it seems clear that she is using a raven as a symbol or harbinger of death.
Your throat is hoarse.
Image and Irony are some examples of figurative devices on Macbeth, a playwright by William Shakespeare. In this line by a lady in Macbeth for example says: 'The raven himself is hoarse, the croaks the fatal entrance of Duncan' in which the word raven suggests a sensation in fixing the hones of those people who had been enforced and Duncan is going to his fate.
She had an hoarse voice because of her sore throat. Hoarse is another word for rough or harsh. After shouting hard she had a hoarse voice.
The homophone for "hoarse" is "horse."
A hoarse is a cross between a flamingo and a goldfish.
The hoarse horse was unable to neigh. The horse riding instructor was hoarse by the time the lesson was over.
When I had a sore throat, I was talking in a hoarse voice.
The homophone for the word "hoarse" is "horse."
Hoarse - as in a sore throat makes your voice hoarse
hoarse: Their voices were hoarse from screaming their support at the football game.