0 present participle of cluck
1 to make the low, interrupted noise that a chicken makes
to cluck in disapproval/amazement
The attendants clucked and fussed over passengers.
We see this readily, for example, in his casual attribution of joy to the rhythmically clucking hen.
The clucking of a hen will indicate the very same joy from one hen to another, a concordance of experience made possible by all hens' comparable physiological structures.
He makes a sort of clucking noise of disagreement.
We have heard tonight the clucking noises of distaste for the worst excesses of the régime.
If the intruder is caught, which rarely happens, a fight will occur, which is accompanied by soft clucking, hoarse barking, and a type of roar.
The male then scrambled onto the female's back and copulated, which was then followed by soft clucking and occasionally more preening.
When red foxes draw close together, they emit trisyllabic greeting warbles similar to the clucking of chickens.
Most often, the act includes a clucking vocalization, commonly known as dooking.