0 present participle of yell --
1 to shout something or make a loud noise, usually when you are angry, in pain, or excited: --
[ + speech ] "Just get out of here!" she yelled.
Our neighbours were yelling (obscenities) at each other this morning.
When he reached the corner he found twenty or thirty men, with a herd of cattle, shouting and yelling.
At the first instance of an accident in a private nursery school, all of them will be yelling for more regulation.
He can hear them yelling.
Behaviors such as withdrawal, silence, yelling, or rough physical treatment in response to the child's expression of need would also heighten rather than reduce the child's anxiety.
Parents might also restrict the adolescent's activities with a certain disliked peer by making outspoken remarks on the peer's undesirable characteristics or habits, such as smoking or yelling.
Owing to the nature of the context, there is considerable noise on the audio record, including extensive overlapping of conversations, yelling, loud noises, unexpected interruptions, volume changes, and so on.
Yet he himself was sometimes justifiably accused, especially early during his career, of flying off the handle in baiting referees and yelling things at opposing coaches and players.
Negative affect was coded if frowning, crying, yelling, pouting or explicit facial expressions of anger were present.