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cry
[ krahy ]
verb (used without object)
- to utter inarticulate sounds, especially of lamentation, grief, or suffering, usually with tears.
- to weep; shed tears, with or without sound.
- to call loudly; shout; yell (sometimes followed by out ).
Synonyms: scream, ejaculate, exclaim, vociferate, clamor, bawl, yowl
- to demand resolution or strongly indicate a particular disposition:
The rise in crime cried out for greater police protection.
- (of a hound or pack) to bay continuously and excitedly in following a scent.
- (of tin) to make a noise, when bent, like the crumpling of paper.
verb (used with object)
noun
- the act or sound of crying; any loud utterance or exclamation; a shout, scream, or wail.
- a fit of weeping:
to have a good cry.
- the utterance or call of an animal.
- a political or party slogan.
- an oral proclamation or announcement.
- a call of wares for sale, services available, etc., as by a street vendor.
- public report.
- an opinion generally expressed.
- Fox Hunting.
- a pack of hounds.
- a continuous baying of a hound or a pack in following a scent.
cry
/ kraɪ /
verb
- intr to utter inarticulate sounds, esp when weeping; sob
- intr to shed tears; weep
- intrusually foll byout to scream or shout in pain, terror, etc
- troften foll byout to utter or shout (words of appeal, exclamation, fear, etc)
- introften foll byout (of animals, birds, etc) to utter loud characteristic sounds
- tr to hawk or sell by public announcement
to cry newspapers
- to announce (something) publicly or in the streets
- intrfoll byfor to clamour or beg
- to call
- cry for the moonto desire the unattainable
- cry one's eyes out or cry one's heart outto weep bitterly
- cry quits or cry mercyto give up a task, fight, etc
noun
- the act or sound of crying; a shout, exclamation, scream, or wail
- the characteristic utterance of an animal or bird
the cry of gulls
- a call
- archaic.an oral announcement, esp one made by town criers
- a fit of weeping
- hunting the baying of a pack of hounds hunting their quarry by scent
- a pack of hounds
- a far cry
- a long way
- something very different
- in full cry(esp of a pack of hounds) in hot pursuit of a quarry
Other Words From
- counter·cry noun plural countercries
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of cry1
Idioms and Phrases
- a far cry,
- quite some distance; a long way.
- only remotely related; very different:
This treatment is a far cry from that which we received before.
- cry one's eyes / heart out, to cry excessively or inconsolably:
The little girl cried her eyes out when her cat died.
- in full cry, in hot pursuit:
The pack followed in full cry.
- cry havoc. havoc ( def 4 ).
- cry over spilled / spilt milk. milk ( def 12 ).
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
“He turned pale, trembled to a great degree, was much agitated, and began to cry,” she told the court.
The girls send a cry for help…the situation of these girls is distressing.
Both the Ramos sons squeezed their eyes and lowered their heads, doing their best not to cry.
It has long been a battle cry in conservative circles that Christmas is under siege.
Kendrick rapidly chants these last lines in repetition with Bilal and Anna Wise sing-shouting behind him, like a rallying cry.
Do not the widow's tears run down the cheek, and her cry against him that causeth them to fall?
At Felipe's cry, the women waiting in the hall hurried in, wailing aloud as their first glance showed them all was over.
I could have sworn I heard a cry, and one of my men spoke in a tone that assured me my imagination had not been playing a trick.
A sob rose in her throat, and broke from her lips transformed into a trembling, sharp, glad cry.
Antirosa had decided it was better to let the children "have their cry out," and the boy had gone to school.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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