tumult

[ too-muhlt, tyoo- ]
/ ˈtu məlt, ˈtyu- /

noun

violent and noisy commotion or disturbance of a crowd or mob; uproar: The tumult reached its height during the premier's speech.
a general outbreak, riot, uprising, or other disorder: The tumult moved toward the embassy.
highly distressing agitation of mind or feeling; turbulent mental or emotional disturbance: His placid facade failed to conceal the tumult of his mind.

Origin of tumult

1375–1425; late Middle English tumult(e) < Latin tumultus an uproar, akin to tumēre to swell

synonym study for tumult

1. See ado.

Words nearby tumult

Example sentences from the Web for tumult

British Dictionary definitions for tumult

tumult
/ (ˈtjuːmʌlt) /

noun

a loud confused noise, as of a crowd; commotion
violent agitation or disturbance
great emotional or mental agitation

Word Origin for tumult

C15: from Latin tumultus, from tumēre to swell up