furore
noun
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L321061 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /f(j)ʊˈɹɔːɹi/ / /f(j)ʊˈɹɔːɹeɪ/ / /ˈfjʊɹˌoɹ/
noun
Etymology: Borrowed from Italian furore, from Latin furor. Doublet of furor.
- Alternative form of furor.
““Despite the current furore over hacking, which is only a modern term for bugging, eavesdropping, signals intercept, listening-in, tapping, monitoring, there has never been guaranteed privacy since the earliest optical telegraphs to today’s internet,” Packer says. “There never was and never will be privacy.””