shouting
n. 喊叫,呼叫
v. 呼,喊,叫( shout的現在分詞 ); 大聲講
If you shout, you say something very loudly, usually because you want people a long distance away to hear you or because you are angry.
He had to shout to make himself heard above the near gale-force wind...
在呼嘯的大風中他得大聲喊叫才能讓別人聽見。
'She's alive!' he shouted triumphantly...
“她還活著!”他歡欣鼓舞地大聲叫道。
If you say that someone is in with a shout of achieving or winning something, you mean that they have a chance of achieving or winning it.
He knew he was in with a shout of making Craig Brown's squad for Japan.
他明白自己有望為日本建成克雷格·布朗之隊。
If you are in a pub and someone you are with says 'It's your shout' or 'It's my shout', they mean that it is your turn or their turn to buy a round of drinks.
1. encouragement in the form of cheers from spectators;
2. uttering a loud inarticulate cry as of pain or excitement
1. noisy with or as if with loud cries and shouts;
People are shouting outside.
外面人們在嚷嚷.
Cheers drowned his shouting.
歡呼聲蓋過了他的叫聲.
People were shouting and cheering with abandon.
人們興高采烈,縱情歡呼.
What's that boy shouting about?
那男孩大聲喊什麼?
She had stopped crying but his shouting set her off again.
她已經不哭了,但是他的大聲喊叫使她又哭了起來.