chatsar (Hebrew #2690)
properly, to surround with a stockade, and thus separate from the open country; but used only in the reduplicated form chatsotser {khast-o-tsare'}; or (2 Chronicles 5:12) chatsorer {khats-o-rare'}; as dem. from 2689; to trumpet, i.e. blow on that instrument
KJV usage: blow, sound, trumpeter.
Pronounce: khaw-tsar'
Origin: a primitive root