clucking造句1. could hear the hens clucking in the farmland.
2. She stood clucking over the baby.
3. The bird made frantic gobbling or clucking noises, which meant it knew what it was in for.
4. I gave him to Nonni who was clucking round the kitchen and said I must go and clean myself up.
5. though it has not attracted much public clucking.
6. You two hens finish your clucking.
7. Then the clucking of a chicken came from somewhere near the half built house.
8. " You little fraud, " he said, clucking to the horse..com
9. To make clucking or clicking sounds with the lips, as in urging on a horse.
10. She went quietly and busily clucking around, laying the eggs and mothering the chickens in a kind of anxious dream that still was full of sureness.
11. Superintendent Fairbairn was still clucking at the photographers, warning them he'd be speaking to their editor.
12. Just then he heard a hen clucking. He knew that hen was brown.
13. It's so perfect that they should effortlessly spawn the very stuff which facilitates the clicking of needles and clucking of tongues.
14. From it, as she passed, came the companionable muted clucking of hens settling for the night.
15. Granny was a galleon in the queue of our boys, glowing and clucking.
16. Now Artemis heard something, something feathery shaking itself, and then clucking, in a low, solemn cluck.
17. In classic barnyard fashion, it was scratching, pecking and clucking.
18. It gives her pleasure, I suppose, to do all that clucking round and I have not the heart to do anything but play along, keep up appearances.
19. Another hen joined in. Pretty soon the yard was full of worried, clucking chickens.
20. I had been looking forward to going out with Urmat to herd the sheep at sundown, so I am disappointed when he merely stands outside his yurt making clucking, yodelling sounds through cupped hands.
21. Normally reserved, sensible adults are suddenly walking around the stage clucking like chickens or singing at the top of their lungs.
22. It was jet-black with a crimson wattle, and it seemed unaware that it was in New York City. In classic barnyard fashion, it was scratching, pecking and clucking.