Wailed is a verb. It's the past tense of wail.
Happy, joyful, or cheerful. Those are opposites of wailed.
cried blubbered shrieked howled wailed
grumbled, griped, groused, lamented, sobbed, wailed, whinged sighed, groaned, whined, whimpered, sobbed, wailed, lamented Verb complained, grumbled, whined, griped, groused, carped, lamented, whinged groaned, sighed, whined, whimpered
Shouted, bellowed, hollered, howled, screamed, roared, shrieked, and wailed.
Contractions are not suitable for formal writing, except when recording speech. So we write the contraction they're in dialogue, generally with quotation marks: "I've been waiting all day for these, and now they're the wrong ones," Billy wailed.
This sentence is in the natural order: the subject (the siren) is first, and it is followed by the verb (wailed).
Bluepaw wailed in dismay at the sight of her dead mother.
Yes, "wailed" is a verb.
the baby wailed when the doctor cut it's umbilical cord
Happy, joyful, or cheerful. Those are opposites of wailed.
cried
cried blubbered shrieked howled wailed
kale, jail, male, mail, pail, pale..?!
i heard a loud wail from the next room because the baby got a shot and it must of hurt. The baby wailed as his mother changed his diaper
Shouted, hollered, screamed, howled, wailed, cried out, called out
another word is cry. :)
First of all they are all female. It means trouble, impending death, etc.