shout造句91. I know I'm late, but that's no reason to shout at me.
92. We had to shout over the noise of the traffic.
93. Give me a shout when you've finished in the bathroom.
94. We could bang on the desks and shout till they let us out.
95. The pay increase is nothing to shout about, but it's better than last year's.
96. We had to hammer and shout before they would open up.
97. Several large abstract paintings shout at her.
98. They will drink, shout, sing and dance.
99. I heard a distant shout.
100. Look, you needn't shout.
101. The platoon commanders shout their commands and the recruits manoeuvre into the required formations.
102. They banged tables and a little old professor would shout and stab the air with his cigar.
103. If Lois had to shout in her conscientious efforts, Paul had turned out to be naturally brilliant around hearing aids.
104. He wanted to scream and shout, beat the wall and call down the forces of destruction.
105. At this juncture my role was only to shout encouragement: Yeah!
106. And while you may not swear or shout aloud, your writing slows, words dropping stiff and stilted.
107. You just shout at them and they burst into tears.
108. Sometimes he strained his head up towards the ceiling and his mouth moved as if he were trying to shout orders.
109. With a shout, Silver threw his crutch through the air.
110. Popular suffrage meant that rival factions would shout for their own candidate.
111. Ingrid was brought out of her daydream by a shout from her mother.
112. It was impossible to shout to the pair, for the roar of the Falls drowned out all other sounds.
113. The man with the thin hair continued to shout and wag his finger.
114. Her laugh was a gleeful, exuberant shout, her deep voice making it almost masculine.
115. It was a harrowing din, a cascade of furious voices merged into a single pulsating shout.
116. As we passed through the city wall, a great shout went up from the occupants of the car.
117. Rumble rumble, shout and holla, came the sudden commotion in the corridor.
118. Suffice it to say that the whisper eventually turned into a shout and the five-foot pile of dirt was reduced considerably.
119. Sometimes Deborah had to shout at Scott to get him to do his extra chores.
120. We'd slowly creep up on them then shout abuse and kick sand all over them.