It seriously depends upon the situation dude. If dat person's troubling u den strt wit a "wats ur f**king problem wit me......"..If he's doin somthing rong den "wat de f*** r u doin ass'ole"....it goes on lyk dat..
www.veoh.com has Black Cat in English....
vilaku yennai vilaku = diya/deepam yennai=oil if you want to scold..vilakkenna ;)
I need someone to speak to.I need someone to talk to
Hera's favorite thing to do was whine all day long and scold people like zues:)
flaca means skinny or lean (for someone/something feminine)
"Scold" is more commonly used in both formal and informal settings to indicate a verbal reprimand. "Ripremand" is not a common or standard term in English and is not used for scolding or reprimanding someone.
"Scold" is more colloquial than "reprimand." "Scold" is commonly used in everyday conversation to criticize or reprove someone informally, while "reprimand" is more formal and typically used in professional or official settings.
Scolded is the past tense of the verb scold. Because scold is a regular verb, scolded is also its past participle.
To 'give (someone) an earful' means to scold sharply.
to sream or to be mad,angry,(p-offd)
chastise, scold, reproach, criticize, chew someone out. hope that helps.
One sentence for scold is; The teacher had to scold some students for disrupting the class.
Scolded is the past participle of scold.
The past tense of scold is "scolded".
keep scold people scold people scold people until people die..........
The word "pinagalitan" is in Tagalog or Filipino language (national language of the Philippines). In English language it's meaning is "scolded".
The word is "berate," which means to scold or criticize someone harshly.