disapprove
Yes, the word 'shout' is both a noun (shout, shouts) and a verb (shout, shouts, shouting, shouted).EXAMPLESnoun: Give me a shout when you're ready to go.verb: I heard the man shout but the driver didn't hear him.
happy shout
to shout out loudly at someone
Disapprove(maybe)
shout boo in while there in the bath
roar means to shout out(by an animal) a loud noise to scare off other animals
The song used in the Shout commercials is called "Shout" by The Isley Brothers.
I/you/we/they disapprove. He/she/it disapproves. The present participle is disapproving.
'I disapprove of you doing that'.
how to send a shout out is try to call a radio station and tell them you called to send a shout out or go to there website and type send a shout out and the radio will read what you wrote to them on the station.
I disapprove of your behavior.
There may be those who disapprove of this example sentence.
To disapprove is to object to something because you believe it's the wrong thing to do. And in English, we disapprove ofsomething. So: I disapprove of my step-daughter getting a tattoo.
The root word for "disapprove" is "approve."
You seem to be describing a "shout".
The "Scare Your Pants Off Club" is an element seen in an Arthur book called Arthur and the Scare-Your-Pants-Off-Clubby Marc Brown.