[
UK
/hˈɒləɹɪŋ/
]
[ US /ˈhɑɫɝɪŋ/ ]
[ US /ˈhɑɫɝɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
-
a very loud utterance (like the sound of an animal)
his bellow filled the hallway
How To Use hollering In A Sentence
- He was hollering something about seeing a snake.
- Despite much hooting and hollering for a second encore, Casablancas and crew were in all probability far too intoxicated to perform any more songs by that point.
- Shouting, whooping, hollering, and shooting into the air, they raced toward the ranch.
- The soldiers were shouting and whooping and hollering.
- One of the things that irritates me is when the people in the GLBT community who prefer candy bars start hollering 'homophobe' or 'transphobe' when allies offer constructive criticism. TransGriot
- The ball sailed a mile over and the outrage that followed was the product of Novo's team-mates hollering at him.
- Bassist Stephen Hanley takes it to the bridge, guitarist Craig Scanlon paints the lines in the toll lane with shards of noise, and Smith stands in the middle of the road hollering at passersby, replacing Brown's deep-gut "hunh" with a nasal "ah" - a rhythmic device that allows him to ensnare any word in his metered grasp. The Fall
- He cursed loudly, hollering it at the two men who'd raised him.
- And that is inevitably influenced by footage of his spiritual mentor hollering damnation on America and speculating that the government is trying to wipe out blacks with AIDS.
- Her friends started clapping loudly, hooting and hollering as Scarlet just blushed.