Cri il dehors
Crier means 'to shout, to cry' in English.
You don't need to shout, I'm standing right here.
extatique is how you say ecstatic in french
occupé is how you say engaged in French
Mal is how you say badly in French.
crier,hurler
Encore. but if you're applauding in a theatre and wanting a repeat, shout 'BIS!'
clame comes for the verb 'clamer', meaning to shout or say in a very loud voice.
To shout or yell
The past tense of shout is "shouted"
Do you mean like when you shout "in your face!" at someone to mock them? In that case, in French you could say, "dans ta gueule!" (sounds like: dah[n] tah gu No we wouldn't say that - ta gueule! means shut up
You can just shout: Attention ! and in French it is followed with the preposition à (for in English): frenchspanishonline.com/magazine/watch-out-in-french/
If it's the lumberjack warning shout before the tree is falling, there is no equivalent. For timber as wood, it would be the same as wood, "bois" or trees, "arbres".
Crier means 'to shout, to cry' in English.
He shouted, " NEVER SAY NEVER!" Or: I don't want to hear you shout, "Never shout never" ever again.
i would say that twist and shout is considering to be rock n' roll
It would say, "Help! Get me out of this cage!"