Horn in a sentence as a noun

Cloudflare can toot its own horn all day long.

That darn horn just looks like a penis, doesn't it?

I slowed, stopped, sat there for 5 seconds waiting and then leaned on the horn.

Didn't mean to horn in on your grumpy old guy glory.

Trying to shoe-horn an artifical problem an a design will, unsuprinsingly, no yield proper result.

RolleyesI hope they enjoyed tooting their own horn, yet another place I know to avoid bothering to interview at.

Horn in a sentence as a verb

The only long-term solution is to somehow stop the demand for rhino horn from Asia and thus remove the profit motive for poaching rhinos in the first place.

He spends the majority of the post tooting his own horn about how people want to hire him, and how he's actually a good programmer because he ships code, and because he's worked at startups.

So what's it actually like working with Steve Jobs?Half joking aside, it would have been nice if the author would have spent more than 1/5th of the article actually talking about what he claimed he was going to give insight on. Instead the author spent most of the article tooting his own horn, which is fine, if that's what the title had indicated to expect.

Taking something that already works and touting your own horn about how you can provide faster updates isn't really something that a big corporate player that wants to get into the open source market should be doing.

No one uses it now, but it was ubiquitous that -- like the audiocassette or the distinctively shaped horn of a Victrola phonograph -- its shape has become semi-permanently associated in our culture with its intended use.

Yep.> A disgruntled former employee of Texas Auto Center chose a creative way to get back at the Austin-based dealership: He hacked into the company's computers and remotely activated the vehicle-immobilization system, which triggered the horn and disabled the ignition system in more than 100 of the vehicles.

Horn definitions

noun

a noisemaker (as at parties or games) that makes a loud noise when you blow through it

noun

one of the bony outgrowths on the heads of certain ungulates

noun

a noise made by the driver of an automobile to give warning;

noun

a high pommel of a Western saddle (usually metal covered with leather)

noun

a brass musical instrument with a brilliant tone; has a narrow tube and a flared bell and is played by means of valves

See also: cornet trumpet trump

noun

any hard protuberance from the head of an organism that is similar to or suggestive of a horn

noun

the material (mostly keratin) that covers the horns of ungulates and forms hooves and claws and nails

noun

a device having the shape of a horn; "horns at the ends of a new moon"; "the hornof an anvil"; "the cleat had two horns"

noun

an alarm device that makes a loud warning sound

noun

a brass musical instrument consisting of a conical tube that is coiled into a spiral and played by means of valves

noun

a device on an automobile for making a warning noise

See also: hooter

verb

stab or pierce with a horn or tusk; "the rhino horned the explorer"

See also: tusk