How To Use Bellow In A Sentence

  • The use of steam-driven bellows in blast furnaces helped ironmakers switch over from charcoal (limited in quantity) to coke, which is made from coal, in the smelting of pig iron.
  • He is like a Tyrannosaurus Rex, leading a herd of corporate dinosaurs over the cliff and bellowing as he goes.
  • Some looked angry, while others seemed more amused as some of the angriest protesters bellowed at them through a loudhailer.
  • Jayson drew his swallow and jumped off his stead as Virgo let out a bellow as he tried to scare off the attackers.
  • Saul Bellow is the greatest Jewish American writer after Ernest Hemingway and William Faulkner died.
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • I was anxious as I drove Route 40 through the shaley, steep bit of country, where the hills are close like the bellows of an accordion. CHASING the WHITE DOG
  • From high up in the stand the manager bellowed instructions to the players via the touchline. Times, Sunday Times
  • There was so much noise already; I didn't want to introduce a competing bellow.
  • 'That's your problem!' bellowed Hurley.
  • Consider a classic experiment where volunteers were told to bellow as loud as they could as part of a shouting competition. Times, Sunday Times
  • Still Galen appears by this experiment to prove both that the pulsative property extends from the heart by the walls of the arteries, and that the arteries, whilst they dilate, are filled by that pulsific force, because they expand like bellows, and do not dilate as if they are filled like skins. Introduction
  • The soldier bellowed and bent over in pain, but still held onto Cairn to the best of his abilities.
  • The cowboy's life was far more prosaic than it appears in modern legend, consisting mainly of endless hours on the trail surrounded by thousands of bellowing beasts. The American Nation: A History of the United States to 1877
  • For $3.7 million, you, too, can sit in this singular creation, gaze out at the magnificent sunsets, watch eagles wheel against the bright blue empyrean, pit yourself against the bellowing 74-mile-an-hour winds, the arctic snows, the unforgiving landscape. Undone by a house of dreams
  • A wind instrument, it has bellows into which compressed air is pumped.
  • The visitor, we're told, gazing at the soft-bellied male race enthusiasts in the stands, would be horrified and bellow (if he could indeed speak): "My sons, my sons, why have you forsaken me? Testosterone Put to the Test
  • Other times I sought refuge in the safe haven of grandfather's forge and helped him to make sickles or horseshoes by manning the big bellows.
  • The captain bellowed a command at the troops.
  • He held his arms out to the crowd as he bellowed the chorus and danced.
  • Five goalless draws in the last nine games has got Old Trafford fans bellowing for them to attack. The Sun
  • He bellowed with pain when the tooth was pulled out.
  • The Coalbrookdale Company had smelted its last iron in the area by 1821, and that year had dismantled the Resolution steam engine that pumped water up the dale to power the furnace bellows.
  • One person bellowed as he gripped the metal tube in his meaty hands.
  • The stag bellowed again and turned and ran to the woods. Hollow-bellied Jack « A Fly in Amber
  • He points to a little button which allows air to whoosh out of the bellows so that they can be closed. Times, Sunday Times
  • From high up in the stand the manager bellowed instructions to the players via the touchline. Times, Sunday Times
  • Bellow's letters take the reader through a long and replete – "capacious" is his wife's word for it – life. Saul Bellow's widow on his life and letters: 'His gift was to love and be loved'
  • It was connected to a pair of bellows, they in turn were feeding a long tube. THE RIVAL QUEENS: A COUNTESS ASHBY DE LA ZOUCHE MYSTERY
  • Then we began the second half the walk through countryside, stopping to marvel nervously at an enraged bull bellowing from a field. Times, Sunday Times
  • His voice rose to a bellow.
  • The muffled bellows were the only sounds he could make as his face was pushed closer and closer to the glowing rings.
  • Round and round the decks they went, Mugridge sick with fear, the sailors hallooing and shouting directions to one another, and the hunters bellowing encouragement and laughter.
  • He points to a little button which allows air to whoosh out of the bellows so that they can be closed. Times, Sunday Times
  • Bellow's remarkable achievement in Herzog lies in narrative technique.
  • I was distraught and let out a bellow of tearful rage.
  • Then, our officers and non-coms bellow the order to halt.
  • It was a hoarse, awful, prolonged bellow, as of some giant ox in sore distress, and when it would stop, occasionally, faint and far would come another bellow, mellowed by distance, but sounding unspeakably eerie and frightsome. All Aboard A Story for Girls
  • She bellowed in pain and fell to the floor in agony.
  • Colonel Fergusson had his eyes closed and was breathing out through his nose in long smooth puffs like a bellows.
  • The box bellows is a simple device which can be constructed by anyone with rudimentary carpentry skills.
  • They straggled across the green, all three generations of them, bellowing at each other as if they were at least half a mile apart, rather than the two paces that actually separated them.
  • All that was needed abroad or at home was to repeat the same sentence more slowly at a puzzled auslander, if that didn't work it was polite to bellow it repeatedly while frothing at the mouth until puce. Army Rumour Service
  • If the patient demonstrates an anal bellows or great toe flexion, this confirms the location of S3, and the surgeon removes the stylet of the foramen needle.
  • He opened an agricultural museum which included a gigantic pair of bellows, seven or eight feet tall.
  • Gradually the catawampus gained on her; she could hear the closer thudding of its hugely clawed feet, and the blasting bellow of its breath. Roc and a Hard Place
  • They blow bellows at them to simulate a strong wind and then light torches to simulate the imagined layer of fire in the sky.
  • Fritts's are tracker organs, which create sound by a series of levers, springs, and push rods that open valves in a wind-chest to let air pass from bellows to pipes.
  • The anesthesia care provider must use a latex-free breathing circuit with plastic mask and bag, and the ventilator bellows must be nonlatex.
  • He bellowed in pain yet managed to struggle to his feet, fending off his assailant before collapsing. Times, Sunday Times
  • I was in great surprise at seeing the mouth of Unknown, so much surpassing in horror the jaws of upper Hell, I could hear a prodigious noise of arms, and loud discharges from one side, answered by what seemed to be hoarse thunders from the other; the rocks of Death, meanwhile, rebellowing the tumult. The Sleeping Bard or, Visions of the World, Death, and Hell
  • That gentleman bellowed in an infuriated manner.
  • As the farmer poured the fluid into the wounds they would bellow loudly and kick out at him.
  • Two generations after antinepotism laws began to open up civil service positions to excluded groups like Jews and blacks, "the pendulum seems to be swinging the other way," says Adam Bellow, author of a book called "In Praise of Nepotism. Kennepotism
  • An electric fan is now used instead of bellows to excite the embers and a compressor drives a spray painter, but other tasks are manual.
  • They straggled across the green, all three generations of them, bellowing at each other as if they were at least half a mile apart, rather than the two paces that actually separated them.
  • Once crowded in here, the creatures were prisoned, each in a separate pen, by gates that shut, leaving them no room to turn around; and while they stood bellowing and plunging, over the top of the pen there leaned one of the "knockers," armed with a sledge hammer, and watching for a chance to deal a blow. The Jungle
  • Sergeant Rothiere bellowed at them in a mix of French and Kanarese, and his sudden authority calmed the men who gathered around Colonel Gudin. Sharpe's Tiger
  • With an angry bellow, the daemon rose to confront him.
  • Let us do what the Vikings did for their departed ones and raise giant mugs of mead and bellow songs of warrior conquests!
  • From high up in the stand the manager bellowed instructions to the players via the touchline. Times, Sunday Times
  • That scream from the treetops is answered by another, and another, until the tropical forest shakes under a thundering bellow.
  • The way the English deal with their current law - and how they enforce closing time by bellowing at poor drinkers - smacks of a mean streak of miserableness.
  • The cops in front of her were bellowing at the man, trying to make him let her go.
  • The bunyip lives in creeks, swamps, and billabongs and has a loud, bellowing cry.
  • 'A brawler, 'or, as Delitzsch renders it,' boisterous '-- look into a liquor-store if you want to verify that, or listen to a drunken party coming back from an excursion and making night hideous with their bellowings, or go to any police court on a Monday morning. Expositions of Holy Scripture Second Kings Chapters VIII to End and Chronicles, Ezra, and Nehemiah. Esther, Job, Proverbs, and Ecclesiastes
  • They launched the ship upon the main, Which bellowed like a wrathful bear; Down to the bottom the vessel sank, A laidly Trold has dragged it there. Lavengro
  • Several of the bulls started bellowing and the cows mooing.
  • Feel your body, feel that crimson muscle inside your chest, and those frothy pink bellows of yours, pumping away.
  • The creature bellowed a seeming laugh at the pitiful maneuver, gnashing its wicked teeth and bullying its fiery body in such a way as to corner Galafar from getting away, coiling its body all around him.
  • He bellowed with pain when the tooth was pulled out.
  • The officer bellowed a command to his men.
  • In front of The Garden of Eden, a walleyed derelict bellowed: `It's all over. TALES OF THE CITY
  • Her words were buried under assorted bawls, bellows, and roars; now it sounded like ten minutes past feeding time at the zoo.
  • Sleiman took a risk in mentioning the abolition of political confessionalism, which is unpopular among Christians, and no doubt in the coming days his critics, many of whom would otherwise advocate setting up a system of thirds, will bellow that the president is selling the Christians out. The Daily Star > News Feed
  • The Concise Oxford Dictionary says that "fool" in its usual sense is Middle English, from Old French, from Latin 'follis' meaning 'bellows or empty-headed person'. July recipe: Gooseberry fool
  • While the calm held, the Eniel ran quiet as a dream: her captain hated needless bellowing, calling it the poor pilot's surrogate for leadership, and merely gestured to the afterguard when the time came to tack for shore. Excerpt: The Red Wolf Conspiracy by Robert Redick
  • We could hear the sergeant bellowing commands to his troops.
  • The bellowing from the animals as they fought their bloody battle was incredible.
  • He stormed in brandishing his weapon and bellowed at staff and customers, including a rather shocked police officer, that a stick-up was under way.
  • Moxon, in his "Mechanick Exercises," defines the _tewel_ to be that _pipe_ in a smith's forge into which the nose of the bellows is introduced; and in a A Select Collection of Old English Plays, Volume 1
  • This had been too halcyon a day to clutter up the memory of it with some backwoods bully's melodramatic bellowings. SOMETHING IN THE WATER
  • He's bellowing over the music, declaiming Green policies.
  • He bellowed, nostrils flaring as he jabbed an accusing finger inches away from my face.
  • From our seats we view huge bulls bellowing like gladiators and bowlegged, skinny-bottomed cowboys in chaps nonchalantly smoking rollups.
  • Dad let out a bellow of laughter, which made us all started laughing.
  • With a widened look of panic in his eyes, he bellowed out to Laverne.
  • He bellowed a loud, insane laugh that sounded more like a cackle than a laugh and lifted his goblet, spilling wine down the front of his long, untamed beard.
  • Behind him, the virescent beast crouched as if about to leap again, bellowing defiance and raising clenched fists that were as big as hams.
  • What's this all about?" bellowed Jameson, peering amazedly into the blank eyes of Augustine, who stood rigidly before the iconoscopic eyes and microphones. Archive 2010-03-01
  • Nick bellowed in pain, as she scrambled for her purse, crawling away.
  • The good doctor coloured up with pleasure to hear his boy's name bellowed forth approvingly by a thousand excited lungs. The Firm of Girdlestone
  • Refilling her strained but still indignant lungs, she pressed the megaphone to her lips and bellowed at the empty beaches of the atoll. RUSHING TO PARADISE
  • He stole a glance at the rattling windows, looked upward at the beamed roof, and listened for a moment to the savage roar of the southeaster as it caught the bungalow in its bellowing jaws. WHEN GOD LAUGHS
  • Bellow has a strong sense of morality, so his works demonstrate a strong moral sense, ethical optimism and rejection of the denigration of human life.
  • After last year's Convention of women, I saw an article in a Unitarian paper edited by the Rev.Mr. Bellows of New York, where, in reply to a correspondent on the subject of woman's rights, in which he strenuously opposed her taking part in any thing in public, he said, "Public woman unbonnated and unshawled before the public gaze, and what becomes of her modesty and her virtue? An Address On Woman's Rights
  • It's a compelling strategy and it suggested that Bellow was kindly, caring, a warm-hearted sort of guy.
  • One shot bellowed out, and his gun recoiled, jumping backwards from the force of the bullet ripping from its nozzle.
  • And we hoped a deep roar would bellow from a gleaming example of exquisite design, superior build quality and space-age technology. The Sun
  • Ten metres from them, he bellowed like a crazy man. Times, Sunday Times
  • At the end of these two cows' horns are attached, and to the horns two large goat skin bellows, one each side of the furnace.
  • The bull bellowed with rage.
  • The bellowing of the basto started off the rest of the lower animals, including the nobargans, which growl and roar like beasts. Escape on Venus
  • An inspection of the airbus 321-200 revealed a metal clamp holding bellows to the air conditioning condenser unit was broken.
  • BRIEF SYNOPSIS: Expert bug-hunter William Bellow must find the cyberspace bug that is killing its users. REVIEW: Prime by Nate Kenyon
  • The calf bellowed, bucked, kicked the outside of the trailer.
  • It's a compelling strategy and it suggested that Bellow was kindly, caring, a warm-hearted sort of guy.
  • Henry Bellows commented in the Christian Inquirer, ‘Place woman unbonneted and unshawled before the public gaze, and what becomes of her modesty and her virtue?’
  • One guard bellowed in alarm, the other in pain as Yuki sank her teeth into his arm and kicked his shin.
  • But no, they had to convey their extreme excitement by bellowing at us through the mic, and permanently damaging our hearing.
  • The king bellowed, ‘The prefect is a typical Roman rhetorician - he speaks of everything and understands nothing.’
  • Instantly the lions of Solomon, which had been newly furbished, raised their heads, erected their manes, brandished their tails, until they excited the imagination of Count Robert, who, being already on fire at the circumstances of his reception, conceived the bellowing of these automata to be the actual annunciation of immediate assault. Count Robert of Paris
  • The instruments required by the refiner were a crucible of furnace and a bellows or blow-pipe. Smith's Bible Dictionary
  • Shadows and negative space create daft hallows of his beautiful shapes, in her eyes, there were no shapes as reticent and mature as the ones that outlined cheekbones, eye sockets and the willowed depth bellow his chin. Whispering to the Creature, “You are the Reason the World Is…”
  • In 2002, at the beginning of his tenure as a F.d governor, he picked two traditional landscapes: "Harvest Scene, New York State" (c. 1859), a rare American subject by the expatriate artist Thomas Hotchkiss, and an untitled romantic view of a verdurous valley by Arthur F. Bellows. What Fed Chiefs Like
  • Every big chorus kicks off with a raucous singalong or choir-like swells, and hearing everybody in the studio bellow together may be the best part of the album.
  • His rough left hand turned the handle on the pitch black pot while his right hand pumped a small bellows to encourage the fire.
  • He decides to play drunk, and bellows songs while the cantina staff pick him up and drag him towards the doors.
  • The innkeeper himself greeted Adriana and directed the stabling of the mules and carriages, with grand flourishes and bellowed commands.
  • The public in general, somewhat apathetically, is neither clamoring for him to stay nor bellowing at him to leave. The Accidental Autocrat
  • Five goalless draws in the last nine games has got Old Trafford fans bellowing for them to attack. The Sun
  • It let out a bellow of rage and shook its large head back and forth, throwing a fine spray of slobber through the musty air.
  • The list of products on display also included plastics and packaging equipment, analytical instruments, air compressors, radiators and industrial bellows.
  • I would set it up, put the black hood over my head and adjust the tilts, swings, bellows and lens, compose the image, and then move on.
  • There is an internal tube for exhaust gases surrounded by corrugated, multi-layer bellows.
  • The English rugby anthem Swing Low, Sweet Chariot was bellowed out by more than 600 fans, eager to see their team finally clinch the longed-for title.
  • He gave a sudden bellow of laughter.
  • Who dares betread the holy of holies?" he bellowed. The Boat of a Million Years
  • Bellow is from John Newton (ex slave trader and guy who wrote amazing grace) read 227-252 "Thoughts on the slave trade" books. google.com "I verily believe, that the far greater part of the wars, in Africa, would cease, if the Europeans would cease to tempt them, by offering goods for slaves" Sorry I couldn't fit the whole thing on the descriptions box. WN.com - Articles related to The World-Wonder of modern Bank Profit Making
  • She leaned back against the wall, heaving, her breath coming and going as from a bellows. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS
  • Ten metres from them, he bellowed like a crazy man. Times, Sunday Times
  • He forced a sound out: what started as an infernal bellow emerged as a whimper.
  • Once we reached an agreement we rambled through the campsite bellowing the song out and no doubt disturbing the sleep of many.
  • The sound of Joseph's bellow drew her eyes back to the center.
  • Local firefighters who had risked their lives to help in the rescue efforts were sent on a lap of honour in open-topped cars while after a minute's silence the Indianapolis children's choir bellowed out the national anthem.
  • The Barker lever was a small bellows operated by a second pallet valve connected to the key.
  • In shouting and bellowing and making wild grabs at him, they had only inspired further noise. Superdog! Action plans that work for a happy and well-behaved pet
  • _Christian Inquirer_, a Unitarian paper, edited by the Rev.Mr. Bellows, of New York, where, in reply to a correspondent on the subject of Woman's Rights, in which he strenuously opposed her taking part in anything in public, he said: "Place woman unbonneted and unshawled before the public gaze and what becomes of her modesty and her virtue? History of Woman Suffrage, Volume I
  • This Opera comes with a heavy bassline, a raucous bellow that would drown the loudest baritone.
  • Drenched in sweat, they are prostrated by fatigue, ‘sucking in hot air like bellows and breathless in the suffocating heat’.
  • Chelsea lion crest is printed on the back bellow of the shirts. Archive 2009-08-01
  • For example, breaks, windsails and bellows were devised to control the revolutions of the wheel, while slide rules were adopted to calculate the work-rate and clock bells were installed to ring at the end of a treading stint.
  • Lesser things ran inside and outside, and tickled my skin until the light in my eyes fell to shutters and the back of my brain met it's front where darkness came, and darkness shivered, in the shallow pool of my unconsciousness where God looms and Hell calls in short bellows, slow cups, and weathered coughs. Burt Reynolds, the pig, and me.
  • Lightning flashed in the dark ocean ahead and soon followed by the bellow of the thunder call.
  • When dry, any loose smalt was to be brushed off with a feather or blown off with a bellows.
  • The cornemuse of shepherds and rustic swains became the fashionable instrument, but as inflating the bag by the breath distorted the performer's face, the bellows were substituted, and the whole instrument was refined in appearance and tone-quality to fit it for its more exalted position. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 3, Part 1, Slice 2 "Baconthorpe" to "Bankruptcy"
  • When the temperature inside the furnace reached about 1100°C (by pumping with hand bellows) the copper melted and flowed to the bottom where it was drawn out and cast into ingots.
  • Here we refer back to Bellow. The Times Literary Supplement
  • The heavens added to the noise with a fanfaronade of thunder, which inspired the crocodile to bellow in response. The Golden Torc
  • A single buffalo distress bellow is enough to turn a docile, ruminating herd into a battalion of warriors, ready to charge and chase off an entire pride of lions.
  • When not stopping to bellow a song, they wander into all sorts of unseemly situations.
  • Clavichords were particularly popular with organists because they could practise on them at home instead of in a cold church, and without the need to pay someone to pump the organ bellows.
  • They bellowed out a drinking song.
  • There were women in various stages of undress, aged hacks bellowing out nationalist folk songs, several figures slumped in corners and enough booze to float a battleship.
  • In shouting and bellowing and making wild grabs at him, they had only inspired further noise. Superdog! Action plans that work for a happy and well-behaved pet
  • The demon bellowed in pain, but it was hardly defeated.
  • Then MacNair bellowed a hoarse order, and the firing ceased, and the Indians bound the prisoners with thongs of _babiche_. The Gun-Brand
  • To convey his good tidings he lapses into party-animal mode, bellowing and boogalooing in the bleary, mega-groovy manner of his on-screen character.
  • Consider a classic experiment where volunteers were told to bellow as loud as they could as part of a shouting competition. Times, Sunday Times
  • And a ferocious bellow of rage brought the girl back to her senses.
  • In Saul Bellow's "Humboldt's Gift," the narrator describes himself as an "idiotic old lecher" who is "leaving two children to follow an obvious gold digger to corrupt Europe. Bringing Up Baby? Definitely
  • The girls bellowed forth a laugh.
  • Browne but Nolan; a stonecold shoulder for Donn Joe Vance; all lock and no stable for Honorbright Merreytrickx; a big drum for Billy Dunboyne; a guilty goldeny bellows, below me blow me, for Ida Ida and a hushaby rocker, Elletrouvetout, for Who-is-silvier — Where-is-he? Finnegans Wake
  • My glowing visions were interrupted by a raucous bellow from the penfold; Clarence announcing an arrival. Drums of Autumn
  • The air at Pinnawala rings with bellows and trumpeting, and the cries of ‘mahouts,’ wiry men in sarongs and flip flops who care for and instruct the elephants.
  • Opening her mouth Lula bellowed a penetrating snarl as her fist drove into the wall hammering a hole through it.
  • They roared and bellowed within a handsbreadth of each other as they confronted the travelers. The Lives of Felix Gunderson
  • Hebrew root, "pant" or "snort," referring to the sound of the bellows blown hard. lead -- employed to separate the baser metal from the silver, as quicksilver is now used. Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • Reluctant to leave my now cosy-as-toast cocoon, I bellow for silence, my voice echoing in our still-undecorated rooms.
  • The air is raised by a bellows and on many instruments is brought under pressure in a reservoir; it is then channelled through the pipes by means of valves operated by the keyboard.
  • Climene, was moved almost to tears by the hard fate which through four long acts kept her from the hungering arms of the so beautiful Leandre, howled its delight over the ignominy of Pantaloon, the buffooneries of his sprightly lackey Harlequin, and the thrasonical strut and bellowing fierceness of the cowardly Rhodomont. Scaramouche
  • Edward's bellow outmatched his young son's by half.
  • The copper gilt grate is a marvel of workmanship, and the mantelpiece is most delicately finished; the fire-irons are beautifully chased; the bellows are a perfect gem. Letters of Two Brides
  • And we hoped a deep roar would bellow from a gleaming example of exquisite design, superior build quality and space-age technology. The Sun
  • They alternately stretch and squeeze space - stretch and squeeze somewhat like the bellows of an accordion in play.
  • Velvet bellows, cushions, muskets, plates, microtonic music plus narghiles or hookahs for a post-prandial smoke of tobacco sweetened with such agents as rose essence.
  • Chloe looked up in shock as she heard an angry bellow echo through the huge homestead.
  • Laughing at me, are you, you stinking mistal?" he bellowed. Carson of Venus
  • At 4,500 ft the engine coughed and at 4,000 ft its full-throated bellow killed the silence.
  • Celil was suddenly thrust back into reality from her daydream by the bellow of a war-horn, screeches and roars, and the twang of bowstrings.
  • The poor starving little church mice had chewed their way through the bellows of the church organ.
  • Three sets of drums kept the rhythm steady, flanking him while he bellowed the song's opening lyrics.
  • The bellowing shotte which wakened dead mens swounds, As The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
  • He stormed in brandishing his weapon and bellowed at staff and customers, including a rather shocked police officer, that a stick-up was under way.
  • The lord's voice wheezed out of him, like the wind being squeezed from a pair of rotten bellows. STARDUST
  • The commander bellowed the orders and the men rushed to do the his bidding.
  • The machine begins with a fan being turned by air from a bellows. THE STRATEGY MACHINE
  • Reaching out and turning up the radio, she was soothed by the sounds of the group as they bellowed one of their newer songs out of her speakers.
  • Prior to Bellows, he was stomping around in mukluks, parka and snow pants patrolling missile fields in North Dakota.
  • He’s just about to say something in reply when his name is bellowed from a carload of guests pulling up into the space next to us and a small army of women in pastel suits clamber out and start mobbing him. Confetti Confidential
  • Throughout that forenoon, then, this bull bellowed nobly, still finding many very wicked flies about, so that two mitching boys, who meant to fish for minnows with a pin, were obliged to run away again. Erema
  • With a collective bellow of rage, the creatures advanced.
  • The Latin Americans sambaed through the bleachers to a song of their own singing, as the Dutch oompah-ed and the Americans bellowed from the side. PokerStars Poker Blog
  • Larry could stand no more than an hour in irons, at which time his stupid brutishness overcame any fear he might have possessed, because he bellowed out to the poop to come down and loose him for a fair fight. CHAPTER XIX
  • She then fell to her knees and worked for a few moments at stoking the fire, tapping the logs with the metal prod first and then using the bellows, her fingers warming as the fire flared higher.
  • Up ahead, an irritated bellow echoes around the hall.
  • He would get down on all fours and howl like a wolf, or suddenly rear up like a cornered bear, bellowing and swatting at the air. THE BROKEN GOD
  • This feeling of singing against the chest with the weight of air pressing up against it is known as "breath support," and in Italian we have even a better word, "apoggio," which is breath prop. The diaphragm in English may be called the bellows of the lungs, but the apoggio is the deep breath regulated by the diaphragm. Caruso and Tetrazzini on the Art of Singing
  • He bellowed out in his loudest voice, ‘This lion fears us!’
  • I was bellowing, it was an awful noise, and the next thing I knew I struck out at her.
  • His gun bellowed in his hand and the horses jumped to a gallop.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy