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wailer

NOUN
  1. a mourner who utters long loud high-pitched cries

How To Use wailer In A Sentence

  • (Jer.xxi. 13); ‘waileress’ (Jer.ix. 17); ‘cheseress’ (= electrix, Wisd.viii. 4); ‘singeress’, ‘breakeress’, ‘waiteress’, this last indeed having recently come up again. English Past and Present
  • I just wanted you both to know that Wailer fell off the board while trying to do a back one-and-a-half somersault. THE BLACK BOOK: DIARY OF A TEENAGE STUD VOL. II: STOP, DON'T STOP
  • Subtitled: “Talk Show Interviews with Coatlicue the Aztec Goddess, Malinche the Maligned, the Virgin of Guadalupe and La Llorona: The Wailer,” the fierce foursome is a celebration of the dark goddesses — Mexican figures that have been imprisoned inside the symbols of (respectively) destruction, betrayal, saintliness and errant motherhood. Agua Santa: Holy Water : Rigoberto González : Harriet the Blog : The Poetry Foundation
  • The term "rudie" also referred to bands such as the wailers who expressed ideas that rejected traditional colonial religion and morality. Some opinions
  • With a nod to the Faces, the Stones, James Brown and other legendary wailers, Foreman is a wiggly protagonist of modern day hot.
  • In all kinds of societies throughout human history professional mourners, wailers or keeners, have been paid to produce hireling tears.
  • To quote tuneful wailer Ben Lee, a lot goes on… but nothing happens.
  • I just wanted you both to know that Wailer fell off the board while trying to do a back one-and-a-half somersault. THE BLACK BOOK: DIARY OF A TEENAGE STUD VOL. II: STOP, DON'T STOP
  • Hands down, she is one of the most riveting wailers around.
  • Researchers studying the effectiveness of wailers in Melbourne observed some bats actually hanging from the speakers to investigate the strange sounds more closely.
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