She does several times in books 15-17 of the Odyssey.
I didn't want to scold her in front of the whole class so we went into the hallway to discuss her behavior. My grandmother used to scold us if we snacked before dinner.
Katherine in Shakespeare's "Taming of the Shrew" is often described as an irksome brawling scold because of her feisty and argumentative behavior.
to sream or to be mad,angry,(p-offd)
It means you start screaming at another person because he or she did something wrong.
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".
Yes. To scold means to speak or direct away from wrong-doing. Examples: Sally hated having to scold children on the school bus, but as a bus driver she had the responsibility for the children's welfare and safety. The teenager's mother warned her 14-year old that he was not his place to scold his 6-year-old sister. Teachers have the responsibility to scold and then to guide students. To scold without giving guidance toward proper behavior does little to change the child's actions and offers little in the way of learning what is proper behaviors. "To scold" typically refers to a situation involving the correction of child. However, in close relationships between adults, sometimes one will scold the other. When adults feel that another adult has attempted to scold them, most adults react in irritation and anger about "being treated like a child".
keep scold people scold people scold people until people die..........
"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.
The present tense of scold is:I/You/We/They scold.He/She/It scolds.
It can be one - "If you don't do your homework, your teacher will scold you."However, it can also be a noun - "He is a horrible scold."