[ US /ˈkætˌkɔɫ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a cry expressing disapproval
VERB
  1. utter catcalls at
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How To Use catcall In A Sentence

  • You might want to practice this now, in your mind (or in the mirror!), before summer hits and catcalls multiply exponentially: TheGloss
  • We beeline to Church Street and do the same thing, blowing through red lights and garnering a chorus of catcalls from the local street life.
  • But by then the whole pantomime had collapsed under the weight of its own righteousness, and what little of interest they had to say was lost among the catcalling that carried on behind them.
  • That song also featured a needlessly long pause for dramatic effect that didn't escape the wrath of some audience members who catcalled the pretentious moment.
  • But she turned back after she encountered a crowd of locals who kept catcalling and making lewd comments.
  • Another young women bounded on stage to remind the audience that catcalls are subtler but nevertheless real forms of sexual violence.
  • Egyptian women are sexually harassed to an astonishing degree, groped, ogled, followed by catcalls, behavior that no law forbids. Egypt women stand for equality in the square
  • The men on the stoops looked at us when we walked but didn't catcall. RANDOM ACTS OF SENSELESS VIOLENCE
  • Enthusiastic youths in the audience kept the atmosphere alive with catcalls, wolf whistles, loud cheers and boisterous shouts, besides the occasional hoot and the intermittent scream.
  • Men catcalled me every other block, but even they couldn't kill my day.
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