Scream \Scream\ (skr[=e]m), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Screamed} (skr[=e]md); p. pr. & vb. n. {Screaming}.] [Icel. skr[ae]ma to scare, terrify; akin to Sw. skr["a]ma, Dan. skr[ae]mme. Cf. {Screech}.] To cry out with a shrill voice; to utter a sudden, sharp outcry, or shrill, loud cry, as in fright or extreme pain; to shriek; to screech.
I heard the owl scream and the crickets cry. --Shak.
And scream thyself as none e'er screamed before. --Pope.
Scream \Scream\, n. A sharp, shrill cry, uttered suddenly, as in terror or in pain; a shriek; a screech. ``Screams of horror.'' --Pope.
'If they want to spend Pounds 9 to scream at me that's fine.' But what about the players?
If you're not doing something right, she'll scream and holler.
The only sour note was a scream from the street just in front.
But one woman, who asked not to be identified, telephoned police after hearing the victim scream, "Help me.
We scream inwardly at some of the radical-propagandist hyperboles.
Weiner, an advocate of the controversial "primal scream" therapy, treated Ms. Schreuder, court papers said.
A police operator heard Ms. Kudelycz scream and then heard a gunshot.
Passenger Clinton Suggs testified earlier in the trial that he heard Stetham scream and Hamadi said, "Let the pig suffer!" when Derickson asked the hijackers if she could loosen Stethem's bound hands.
"When a shot came through the glass, everybody started to scream," Meduga said.
A man who was shot and critically wounded while responding to a stranger's scream for help has always tried to lend a hand to people in trouble, his wife said Thursday.
Their wails reach a feverish pitch and peak in a primal scream.
"When I want the West to scream," Nikita Khrushchev once said, "I squeeze on Berlin."
But I was ready to scream." In Dallas, Greyhound spokesman George Gravley said Martin became lost only in Merced, 50 miles northwest of Fresno.
"When we were kids our father would scream.
The media will scream 'cosmetics.'
Daffynition Horror-film scenarist: scream writer.
Trupp also was heard to scream "Help me!
"If I say to you Deep Purple was a big inspiration to me and so were the Ohio Players, you'd say, `Oh, that's where Dave got his scream from, Deep Purple!'
Banks would scream bloody murder if Congress charged them the same excessive rates they charge their own credit-card customers.
I would scream in the car when no one could hear me," she said.
When the car and the talking stopped the woman tried to scream but was unable to because of the gag, Menchel said.
The HUD survey shows construction loans rose 21% from a year earlier in the four months ended last October, while housing starts plunged and builders began to scream about a credit crunch.
"If we win, the Democrats can scream at us for the next few months.
"Angry, he said in English `One American must die,"' Carlson said. "Suddenly I heard him scream `Marine' and I felt a metal bar come down on my head twice.
Teenagers screech, scream, wave flags and constantly blow airhorns handed out in the dozens by campaign staffers.
He added that the 269 institutions subject to action under the 1.5 percent threshold "are going to scream bloody murder," increasing pressure on Congress and regulators to grant exceptions from the rules.
They figure all a lady will do is scream.
One of the final entries on the transcript appears to be a scream.
Male managers complain, as one put it, that women who once "kept their mouths shut now scream about hours and wages." Union activist Lee Kyong-ja has a college degree and worked 20 years for the Korea Development Bank.
Outside, seagulls scream, boats bob, and ocean waves surge over the rocks.