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yowl
[youl]
verb (used without object)
to utter a long, distressful or dismal cry, as an animal or a person; howl.
noun
a yowling cry; a howl.
yowl
/ Ჹʊ /
verb
to express with or produce a loud mournful wail or cry; howl
noun
a loud mournful cry; wail or howl
Other 51Թ Forms
- ˈǷɱ noun
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of yowl1
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of yowl1
Example Sentences
In one number, Swinton, who goes glossy-eyed to show the cracks in her high-fashion veneer, poses in a transparent rain slicker while bleating raw, yowling noises that blend with the despairing strings.
“Noid” was dense and menacing, Tyler’s flow somewhere between a growl and a yowl; “Darling, I” was light and whimsical but almost painfully yearning too.
“Freedom’s just another word for nothing left to lose,” Joplin sang in her signature blues-rock yowl — perhaps the best-known piece of wisdom in Kristofferson’s very wise catalog.
She was making her way from the parking lot to the hospital when she heard yowling coming from some bushes.
I yowled in fury and slashed at the beast, but my claws met nothing but air.
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