hue and cry

التعريفات والمعاني

== English == === Etymology === From Middle English heu and cri, from the Anglo-Norman legal phrase hu e cri. === Pronunciation === === Noun === hue and cry (usually uncountable, plural hue and cries or hues and cries) (historical) The public pursuit of a criminal, accompanied by shouts to warn others to give chase. 1797, Richard Burn, John Burn (corrections and updates), The Justice of the Peace, and Parish Officer, Volume II, 18th Edition, page 753: Because he that firſt raiſeth a hue and cry, where no felony is committed, that is, he who giveth the falſe information, is ſeverely puniſhable by fine and impriſonment, if the information be falſe. (by extension) A loud and persistent public clamour, especially one associated with protest or the making of some demand. 1955, Caryl Chessman, Trial by Ordeal, quoted in 1956 September, Walter P. Armstrong, Jr, book review, American Bar Association Journal, page 854: And because I haven't written off easily, a great hue and cry has gone up that there is something wrong with our whole system of administering justice. ==== Translations ====