-
1 shout
1. noun1) (a loud cry or call: He heard a shout.) κραυγή2) (a loud burst (of laughter, cheering etc): A shout went up from the crowd when he scored a goal.) ξεφωνητό,ιαχή2. verb(to say very loudly: He shouted the message across the river; I'm not deaf - there's no need to shout; Calm down and stop shouting at each other.) φωνάζω,κραυγάζω -
2 cry
1. verb1) (to let tears come from the eyes; to weep: She cried when she heard of the old man's death.) κλαίω2) ((often with out) to shout out (a loud sound): She cried out for help.) φωνάζω2. noun1) (a shout: a cry of triumph.) κραυγή2) (a time of weeping: The baby had a little cry before he went to sleep.) κλάμα3) (the sound made by some animals: the cry of a wolf.) ουρλιαχτό•- cry off
См. также в других словарях:
shout — 1. verb I heard a shout Syn: yell, cry (out), call (out), roar, howl, bellow, bawl, raise one s voice; informal holler Ant: whisper 2. noun he shouted a warning Syn: yell, cry … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
shout — vb Shout, yell, shriek, scream, screech, squeal, holler, whoop are comparable when they mean as verbs to make or utter a loud and penetrating sound that tends or is intended to attract attention and, as nouns, a sound or utterance of this… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
shout — ► VERB 1) speak or call out very loudly. 2) (shout at) reprimand loudly. 3) (shout down) prevent (someone) from speaking or being heard by shouting. 4) Austral./NZ informal treat (someone) to (something, especially a drink). ► NOUN … English terms dictionary
shout somebody down — ˌshout sbˈdown derived to shout so that sb who is speaking cannot be heard • The speaker was shouted down by a group of protesters. Main entry: ↑shoutderived … Useful english dictionary
shout something out — ˌshout sthˈout derived to say sth in a loud voice so that it can be clearly heard • Don t shout out all the answers. • + speech ‘I m over here!’ I shouted out. Main entry: ↑shoutderived … Useful english dictionary
shout — [[t]ʃa͟ʊt[/t]] ♦♦♦ shouts, shouting, shouted 1) VERB If you shout, you say something very loudly, usually because you want people a long distance away to hear you or because you are angry. He had to shout to make himself heard above the near gale … English dictionary
shout — 01. You don t have to [shout], I can hear you quite easily! 02. We heard people in the water [shouting] for help when we approached the sinking ship. 03. Just give me a [shout] if you want to go out for a beer tonight. 04. My kids are driving me… … Grammatical examples in English
shout — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ great, loud ▪ faint, muffled ▪ distant ▪ sudden ▪ … Collocations dictionary
shout — shout1 W2S2 [ʃaut] v 1.) [I and T] to say something very loudly →↑scream, yell ↑yell ▪ There s no need to shout! I can hear you! shout at ▪ I wish you d stop shouting at the children. shout for ▪ We could hear them shouting for help … Dictionary of contemporary English
shout — 1 /SaUt/ verb 1 (I, T) to say something very loudly: There s no need to shout, I m not deaf! | We could hear them shouting for help. | “Watch out!” she shouted, as the car started to move. | shout at sb: I wish you d stop shouting at the children … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
shout down — verb silence or overwhelm by shouting • Hypernyms: ↑hush, ↑quieten, ↑silence, ↑still, ↑shut up, ↑hush up • Verb Frames: Somebody s somebody * * * [verb] … Useful english dictionary