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单词 catcall
释义

Definition of catcall in English:

catcall

noun ˈkatkɔːlˈkætˌkɔl
  • 1A shrill whistle or shout of disapproval made at a public meeting or performance.

    he walked out to jeers and catcalls
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Once the song ended, the crowd erupted into a loud wave of cheers, whistles, and catcalls.
    • Pleas for caution and restraint from the minority who still clung to dwindling hopes of agreement were drowned with jeers and catcalls.
    • Enthusiastic youths in the audience kept the atmosphere alive with catcalls, wolf whistles, loud cheers and boisterous shouts, besides the occasional hoot and the intermittent scream.
    • There were a few catcalls and jeers but no takers.
    • The jokes, catcalls and rude comments kept coming.
    • The catcalls and whistles were amazingly loud.
    • And did I notice some very loud catcalls at the end of the second night's set?
    • [T] he tenacity with which he is standing his ground on this issue, in the teeth of widespread catcalls, ridicule and pressure from so much of the country and the media, is heroic.
    • In one instance her inadequate performance provoked catcalls and derision.
    • In fact, there were cheers and catcalls and laughs scattered throughout the performances - a welcome change from fancy dancy, high-class outings.
    • She stood in front of the feral slam audience to read her love poems, and the resulting jeers and catcalls convinced her never to go near that scene again.
    • The band members shouted catcalls at him and the audience boomed ominously in sudden frustration.
    • All the panto business that now gets a bad name at international matches - whistles, jeers, catcalls and other animal noises - can come out again, with impunity.
    Synonyms
    whistle, boo, hiss, jeer, raspberry, hoot, brickbat, taunt, shout of derision
    wolf whistle
    (catcalls), scoffing, abuse, teasing, taunting, derision, ridiculing, mockery
    British informal the bird
    1. 1.1 A loud whistle or a comment of a sexual nature made by a man to a passing woman.
      women were the objects of catcalls when they walked by the men's barracks
      Example sentencesExamples
      • City exchanges occasionally arranged journalist visits to trading floors, where the most conservatively-dressed female reporter would elicit jeers, catcalls, whistles and handclaps.
      • The women stare indifferently as catcalls and whistling burst loudly from the dark interior of a taxi.
      • ‘Brandon had better figure out a way to get me out of this,’ grumbled Kitty as she walked onstage to the whoops and catcalls of the male population.
      • This is mostly a stereotype, but some men shout catcalls at women on the street, especially when the men are in groups.
      • Another young women bounded on stage to remind the audience that catcalls are subtler but nevertheless real forms of sexual violence.
      • A series of whistles and catcalls greeted me as I walked down the hallway towards my locker, and I suddenly regretted very much wearing a skirt.
      • Squeezing her eyes tight she tried to block out Reed's cold, insistent taunts and the jeering catcalls that seemed to get louder with each passing moment.
      • I ignored the catcalls from Mike as I walked down the hallway with Jason following me.
      • Hips swinging, she walked, amidst more catcalls, over to the computer.
verb ˈkatkɔːlˈkætˌkɔl
[no object]
  • Make a catcall.

    they were fired for catcalling at women
    Example sentencesExamples
    • With the jeering and catcalling from the Government benches, I missed the answer.
    • But by then the whole pantomime had collapsed under the weight of its own righteousness, and what little of interest they had to say was lost among the catcalling that carried on behind them.
    • An element of the crowd began to hoot and catcall during the speeches, setting a disorderly tone for the following proceedings.
    • Men catcalled me every other block, but even they couldn't kill my day.
    • The men whistled, catcalled and shouted their trades through the ornate metalwork gates in a bid to find jobs.
    • Patricia is catcalled repeatedly by a group of construction workers outside the station.
    • The young woman trying to maintain her dignity as she walks down a busy street, ogled and catcalled by a horde of males.
    • The poor creature took fright and ran with the mob catcalling after her and even throwing a rock or two.
    • The children laughed and catcalled and pushed and shoved as they hurried toward the exits.
    • She stopped at a stop light and realized someone was catcalling to her.
    • It was embarrassing, what with a gathering crowd of sailors looking on, catcalling.
    • There was open laughter and catcalling by the end.
    • For example, a man who may not engage in sexually harassing a woman when he is alone at a bar may begin catcalling to a woman at the same bar if he observes or is with friends engaging in this behavior.
    • He elaborates this notion by pointing out how humorously out of place someone of ‘high culture’ and ‘refined’ taste would seem when placed amidst a group of spitting, catcalling men.
    • The audience went into ecstasies of cheering and catcalling.
    • But she turned back after she encountered a crowd of locals who kept catcalling and making lewd comments.
    • Vendors hawked their wares while gesturing wildly, and groups of dirty street urchins played amidst the chaos, laughing and catcalling to one another.
    • Initial reaction from the workforce was hostile; the trade union representatives vetoed them and the employees involved were subjected to boos and catcalling as they left the assembly line to attend circle meetings.
    • When I got up to criticise her - which led to cheering and catcalling from there on - Cook simply sat back and kept his head down.
    • That song also featured a needlessly long pause for dramatic effect that didn't escape the wrath of some audience members who catcalled the pretentious moment.
    Synonyms
    taunt, mock, scoff at, ridicule, laugh at, sneer at, deride, tease, insult, abuse, jibe, jibe at, scorn, shout disapproval, shout disapproval at

Origin

Mid 17th century: from cat1 + call, originally denoting a kind of whistle or squeaking instrument used to express disapproval at a theatre.

 
 

Definition of catcall in US English:

catcall

nounˈkatˌkôlˈkætˌkɔl
  • 1A shrill whistle or shout of disapproval, typically one made at a public meeting or performance.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • And did I notice some very loud catcalls at the end of the second night's set?
    • Enthusiastic youths in the audience kept the atmosphere alive with catcalls, wolf whistles, loud cheers and boisterous shouts, besides the occasional hoot and the intermittent scream.
    • Pleas for caution and restraint from the minority who still clung to dwindling hopes of agreement were drowned with jeers and catcalls.
    • [T] he tenacity with which he is standing his ground on this issue, in the teeth of widespread catcalls, ridicule and pressure from so much of the country and the media, is heroic.
    • Once the song ended, the crowd erupted into a loud wave of cheers, whistles, and catcalls.
    • The catcalls and whistles were amazingly loud.
    • All the panto business that now gets a bad name at international matches - whistles, jeers, catcalls and other animal noises - can come out again, with impunity.
    • She stood in front of the feral slam audience to read her love poems, and the resulting jeers and catcalls convinced her never to go near that scene again.
    • There were a few catcalls and jeers but no takers.
    • In fact, there were cheers and catcalls and laughs scattered throughout the performances - a welcome change from fancy dancy, high-class outings.
    • In one instance her inadequate performance provoked catcalls and derision.
    • The jokes, catcalls and rude comments kept coming.
    • The band members shouted catcalls at him and the audience boomed ominously in sudden frustration.
    Synonyms
    whistle, boo, hiss, jeer, raspberry, hoot, brickbat, taunt, shout of derision
    1. 1.1 A loud whistle or a comment of a sexual nature made by a man to a passing woman.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Hips swinging, she walked, amidst more catcalls, over to the computer.
      • This is mostly a stereotype, but some men shout catcalls at women on the street, especially when the men are in groups.
      • I ignored the catcalls from Mike as I walked down the hallway with Jason following me.
      • City exchanges occasionally arranged journalist visits to trading floors, where the most conservatively-dressed female reporter would elicit jeers, catcalls, whistles and handclaps.
      • ‘Brandon had better figure out a way to get me out of this,’ grumbled Kitty as she walked onstage to the whoops and catcalls of the male population.
      • A series of whistles and catcalls greeted me as I walked down the hallway towards my locker, and I suddenly regretted very much wearing a skirt.
      • The women stare indifferently as catcalls and whistling burst loudly from the dark interior of a taxi.
      • Squeezing her eyes tight she tried to block out Reed's cold, insistent taunts and the jeering catcalls that seemed to get louder with each passing moment.
      • Another young women bounded on stage to remind the audience that catcalls are subtler but nevertheless real forms of sexual violence.
verbˈkatˌkôlˈkætˌkɔl
[no object]
  • Make a whistle, shout, or comment of a sexual nature to a woman passing by.

    they were fired for catcalling at women
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The young woman trying to maintain her dignity as she walks down a busy street, ogled and catcalled by a horde of males.
    • An element of the crowd began to hoot and catcall during the speeches, setting a disorderly tone for the following proceedings.
    • The men whistled, catcalled and shouted their trades through the ornate metalwork gates in a bid to find jobs.
    • The children laughed and catcalled and pushed and shoved as they hurried toward the exits.
    • Patricia is catcalled repeatedly by a group of construction workers outside the station.
    • When I got up to criticise her - which led to cheering and catcalling from there on - Cook simply sat back and kept his head down.
    • The poor creature took fright and ran with the mob catcalling after her and even throwing a rock or two.
    • With the jeering and catcalling from the Government benches, I missed the answer.
    • Men catcalled me every other block, but even they couldn't kill my day.
    • But by then the whole pantomime had collapsed under the weight of its own righteousness, and what little of interest they had to say was lost among the catcalling that carried on behind them.
    • It was embarrassing, what with a gathering crowd of sailors looking on, catcalling.
    • There was open laughter and catcalling by the end.
    • She stopped at a stop light and realized someone was catcalling to her.
    • But she turned back after she encountered a crowd of locals who kept catcalling and making lewd comments.
    • The audience went into ecstasies of cheering and catcalling.
    • For example, a man who may not engage in sexually harassing a woman when he is alone at a bar may begin catcalling to a woman at the same bar if he observes or is with friends engaging in this behavior.
    • Vendors hawked their wares while gesturing wildly, and groups of dirty street urchins played amidst the chaos, laughing and catcalling to one another.
    • That song also featured a needlessly long pause for dramatic effect that didn't escape the wrath of some audience members who catcalled the pretentious moment.
    • He elaborates this notion by pointing out how humorously out of place someone of ‘high culture’ and ‘refined’ taste would seem when placed amidst a group of spitting, catcalling men.
    • Initial reaction from the workforce was hostile; the trade union representatives vetoed them and the employees involved were subjected to boos and catcalling as they left the assembly line to attend circle meetings.
    Synonyms
    taunt, mock, scoff at, ridicule, laugh at, sneer at, deride, tease, insult, abuse, jibe, jibe at, scorn, shout disapproval, shout disapproval at

Origin

Mid 17th century: from cat + call, originally denoting a kind of whistle or squeaking instrument used to express disapproval at a theater.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/11/10 22:45:54