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sotto voce
[ sot-oh voh-chee; Italian sawt-taw vaw-che ]
adverb
- in a low, soft voice so as not to be overheard.
sotto voce
/ ˈsɒtəʊ ˈvəʊtʃɪ /
adverb
- in an undertone
Word History and Origins
Origin of sotto voce1
Word History and Origins
Origin of sotto voce1
Example Sentences
But instead, the trip is taking place sotto voce.
Heads bent close in the candlelight, speaking sotto voce, they made an almost rom-com pair.
But his subsequent sotto voce remark, to the effect that he probably wouldn’t give any of the Manhattan Project scientists clearance under those rules, doesn’t appear anywhere in the 1,011-page hearing transcript.
Seated next to him at a public hearing, you were in constant danger of laughing out loud at his sotto voce commentaries.
In the well-practiced sotto voce of a veteran concierge, Mulholland offered an addendum: Only five of the explosions that damaged the building, he said, were from incendiary devices planted inside the hotel itself.
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