hue and cry

Etymology
From, from the legal phrase.

Noun

 * 1)  The public pursuit of a criminal, accompanied by shouts to warn others to give chase.
 * 2) * 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.
 * 1)  A loud and persistent public clamour, especially one associated with protest or the making of some demand.
 * 2) * 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.
 * 1) * 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

 * Finnish:
 * Irish: fógra tóra
 * Latin: hutesium et clamor
 * Russian:, держи вора
 * Thai: เสียงร้องเอะอะ


 * Finnish:, äänekäs vastustus
 * German:, , ,
 * Polish: ,
 * Swedish: