Dictionary
bellow
noun
The deep roar of a large animal, or any similar loud noise
Exact(8)
Just as the Skibbereen Eagle grandly warned Kaiser Wilhelm in 1914 that it had its eye on him, so film reviewers feel moved to bellow their disapproval at the Academy.
A little before midnight, the well-wined Ukip leader stood on a chair in a small Italian eatery in the Kent town to bellow out a rendition of New York, New York to the delight of his dining companions.
And there is still enough of August left for him to take a holiday, while his peers bellow on.
Their vote is rather a Francophone bellow of frustration at the dominance of Dutch-speakers in an increasingly divided country.Unexpectedly, Charlemagne has been reminded of these frustrated voters in the past few days, as a string of European Union leaders have declared that a "two-speed Europe" is at hand.
When tabloids bellow that they know the mind of the ordinary voter, it requires some self-confidence for an Oxbridge-educated, sushi-munching minister to ignore them.Britain is an outlier in other ways.
Weaned steers fetch higher prices because they have been hardened by circumstance and do not bellow.
Politicians who choose to bellow through a megaphone, as Mr Hague has, cannot expect to exonerate themselves later on by pointing at the small print.
ACCOSTED by the mayor of Chippenham on the High Street of the pretty Wiltshire market town, Boris Johnson emits a comradely bellow.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com