The crowd cheered loudly as their favorite runner ran past the finish line.
Her smile cheered me right up.
The verb is cheered, past tense of the verb to cheer.
When the striker hammered home the ball, the spectators cheered wildly.
The fans cheered loudly when the performers took their final bows.
"The crowd cheered as the team's star player stepped into the batter's box."
As the marathon runners entered the homestretch, the crowd cheered them on to the finish line.
In this sentence all is a determiner.
As the singer stopped singing the audience cheered.
The victor is the winner. Here are some sentences.He is the victor of the contest.Who will be the victor of the battle?We cheered as the victor strode into the winner's circle.
I'll need to use the entire deck of cards for my next trick. The entire class stood up and cheered.
The crowd cheered to Mozart's violin concerto.
"The crowd cheered the winners, her and me." It is incorrect in this context to say "she and I" and it is always incorrect to say "her and I." You can use "her and me" anywhere that you would use "us," and you can use "she and I" anywhere that you would use "we."
the avid football fan cheered throughout the whole game.