Shouting in a way that you hate the person or thing you are shouting at. So, loud, and high/low-pitched.
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.
Here are some possible words:turret - the mounting of a gun or guns (ship, tank, castle)Tourette Syndrome (Tourette's) - a neurological quirk that elicits shouts and curses
"Gweiddi" is one of the ways to say "Hello" in Welsh. I would like to correct this answer, as it is completely incorrect! "Gweiddi' is "to shout" in Welsh. For example: "She shouts at me every day," would be "Mae hi'n gweiddi arna i bob dydd."
Yes, the Chambers Dictionary defines duh as an interjection suggesting stupidity or a statement of the obviousThe Merriam-Webster Dictionary dates the word to 1966 and defines duh as an interjection used to express actual or feigned ignorance or stupidity or used derisively to indicate that something just stated is all too obvious or self-evident.
(derision - contempt, mocking ) The rats peered with derision in their eyes at the terrified men. Sure of his authority, he dismissed our complaints with a laugh of derision. The reporters could scarcely believe the derision shown by some government employees toward the public.
derisively.
night of dead
The word 'shouts' is both a noun (shout, shouts) and a verb (shout, shouts, shouting, shouted). Examples: Noun: The shouts of the crowd were drowning out the speaker's words. Verb: The coach shouts instructions from the bench.
The possessive form of the plural noun shouts is shouts'.Example: We scanned the area to determine the shouts' origin.
The possessive noun is the citizen's shouts.
The possessive noun is the citizen's shouts.
The meaning is 'laughing loudly and derisively'.
Squawking
Squawking
not that i know of i got a lot of shouts but i dont think i got all the shouts
shouts
To jeer is a word often used in this context