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Bawling   Listen
Bawling

noun
1.
Loud cries made while weeping.  Synonym: wailing.



Bawl

verb
(past & past part. bawled; pres. part. bawling)
1.
Shout loudly and without restraint.  Synonym: bellow.
2.
Make a raucous noise.  Synonym: yawp.
3.
Cry loudly.



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"Bawling" Quotes from Famous Books



... Harris bawling in the passage, and the Chinese stokers swarming up the fire-room ladder, chattering and yelling to their mates below. The news of the murder had spread through the ship and had ...
— The Devil's Admiral • Frederick Ferdinand Moore

... not be so often censured for my own miserable scribble. I defy any boy to learn successfully to make "hooks and trammels" in his copy-book, or ever after learn to trace a graceful calligraphy, if he had "old Talyor" bawling over him. I hope never to meet that man this side of heaven, lest my memory of the long-ago past be too much for ...
— Around The Tea-Table • T. De Witt Talmage

... could scarce follow his jumps. Andy, with a whoop of pure defiance, yanked off his hat and beat the roan over the head with it, yelling taunting words and contemptuous; and for every shout the Weaver bucked harder and higher, bawling like ...
— The Happy Family • Bertha Muzzy Bower

... mechanical force, and fundamentally base. The British Army, for example, still cherishes the tradition that its privates are absolutely illiterate, and such small instruction as is given them in the art of war is imparted by bawling and enforced by abuse upon public drill grounds. Almost all discussion of military matters still turns upon the now quite stupid assumption that there are two primary military arms and no more, horse and foot. "Cyclists are infantry," the War Office manual ...
— Anticipations - Of the Reaction of Mechanical and Scientific Progress upon - Human life and Thought • Herbert George Wells

... be said of boys of various kinds— as pot-boys, butcher's boys, baker's boys, and other boys who are in the habit of bawling down areas; also of several descriptions of men, as cab-men, coach-men, watch-men, and dust-men. The same may likewise be asserted of some women, such as apple-women, oyster-women, fish-women, and match-women. Here also the singing of charity children of both sexes, and the voices of parish-clerks, ...
— The Comic Latin Grammar - A new and facetious introduction to the Latin tongue • Percival Leigh


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