h ha hb hc hd he hf hg hh hi hl hm ho hp hq hr hs ht hu hw hy hz

Перевод: holler speek holler


[существительное]
вскрик ; крик ;
[глагол]
вскрикнуть; кричать; вопить; шуметь; окликать


Тезаурус:

  1. Somebody in the rackets gets a bullet in him, people holler gang war.
  2. The bullards, or bull chasers, would secretly prepare uncouth and wild costumes and the week before the chase their imps would holler through the town, "Hoy, bull, hoy!", in anticipation of the excitement.
  3. My favourite 10 seconds of Bruce Springsteen is the irresponsibly euphoric opening holler of 1980's Hungry Heart: "Got a wife and kids in Baltimore, Jack / I went out for a ride and I never went back", but he never lets go like that here.
  4. His thick-set holler lifts what might otherwise have been a cool but minor diversion into a work of real significance.
  5. This wistful elegy to the post-Bomb small-town America, The Last Picture Show was probably the first film that pined nostalgically for a generation's lost innocence, soundtracking Hank Williams' lonesome holler to great effect.
  6. OR ANY other film in which black, brown, yellow or red people chant, holler and cavort instead of taking cover from White Man's Heroic Hail Of Death.
  7. A three-and-a-halfoctave range allows her to move from a fire-and-brimstone holler to a murmur to a speech in tongues.
  8. SUGAR CERTAINLY ARE LOUD, and besides some reinvigorated guitar mangling, Bob's back to singing at top holler.
  9. Afterwards he will raise his voice and holler loud enough to be heard by the whole roomful of guests milling around chatting, perhaps talking excitedly with drinks in their hands, "LADIES and GENTLEMEN!
  10. They'll let him swing and holler hetero-homo-gay
  11. I see her picture in the paper, then I holler copper and tell them this is the dame from the sanatorium.
  12. The greatest of 'em all, Abraham Lincoln, received a belated musical nod during 1968, when songwriter Dick Holler linked the 16th President's name to that of the Kennedy's and Martin Luther King to provide Dion with a three million seller in "Abraham, Martin And John", while Ulysses Simpson Grant, the next Republican to be called to office in Lincoln's wake, was hailed by Patrick Gilmore's "President Grant's March", which still gets played at the White House during various ceremonies, though far older is "Hail To The Chief", a ditty based on a poem by Sir Walter Scott, which was first played at the inauguration of James Knox Polk, in 1845, and has been retained to announce the arrival of presidents ever since.
  13. With a team in front, life is easier as the dogs follow and all we have to do is keep the tow line taut and holler the occasional encouraging word, as much to each other as to the dogs.

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