0 present participle of bellow --
1 to shout in a loud voice, or (of a cow or large animal) to make a loud, deep sound: --
No power on earth could stop the poor thirsty beasts; bellowing and lowing they ran pell-mell for the water, with the cowboys in hot pursuit.
The familiar air-raid siren wail does kick in eventually, but its bellowing to an uncharacteristically snarly, guitar-churning chorus.
Sheep bleating, oxen bellowing, dogs barking, workers in the field shouting, wagons and carts creaking, and, at home, we can even hear the wolves howling.
The creature made a fearsome bellowing noise and charged the workers, who promptly ran up a nearby hillside and hid in the brush until morning.
Observers of large bellowing choruses have noted they are often felt more than they are heard due to the intense infrasound emitted by males.
Bellowing choruses occur most often in the spring when breeding groups congregate, but can occur at any time of year.
Then bellowing, salivation and stamping take place as for 24 hours the animal becomes more and more distressed until finally it is unable to rise and paralysis sets in.
It is no good bellowing in my ear.