Yahoo France Recherche Web

Résultats de recherche

  1. 25 juin 2008 · Young children scream a lot when they are playing. Many women and girls scream very easily, for example if they receive a shock. It is possible to scream words at someone but this usually implies a lot of anger and a high-pitched sound where the words may not be clear. In general a scream is loud and high-pitched whereas a shout is simply loud.

  2. 26 juil. 2012 · I strongly doubt "You're a scream"/"He's a scream" would be used in that context. These sentences are associated with fairly polite company, and are almost always said in response to catty or witty comments. They're also coded as feminine - a "man's man" wouldn't say "He's a scream" about someone. These connotations make it hard for me to ...

  3. www.filmweb.pl › film › Krzyk-1996-91Krzyk (1996) - Filmweb

    18 déc. 1996 · Współczesny slasher. Ceglas. Wes Craven to bez wątpienia jeden z najpopularniejszych twórców kina grozy w ostatnich latach. "Krzyk" z 1996 roku w jego wykonaniu narobił trochę zamieszania w światku grozy, nie pozostawiając nikogo obojętnym. Jedni uważają, że jest to film kultowy, drudzy po prostu go nie trawią.

  4. 17 déc. 2010 · USA, English. Dec 19, 2010. #14. Au101 said: That's very true Packard, another common term would be 'bump'. I would guess that there is some sort of head-bashing word scale. "Bump" would be at the lighter end of the scale. "Bang" would be a bit harder but hardly sufficient to require a scream.

  5. 7 oct. 2010 · Oct 7, 2010. #1. Salut, je me demande comment on peut traduire en français l’expression idiomatique anglaise dans laquelle le verbe « to scream » est utilisé pour dire que quelque chose a un aspect tellement manifeste. Pour exemple :

  6. 23 janv. 2006 · If you've ever heard a pig being killed but not stunned first, you'll know it makes a lot of noise. Hence the "scream your lives out". The block - the name given to the block of wood that execution victims placed their head on so that it could be chopped off... Gruesome. I'm surprised at the use of the preposition "at". I'd expect it to be "on ...

  7. 7 juin 2021 · Greece. British English (Sussex) Jun 7, 2021. #3. If you use scream, one of these: "she screamed (out) (loudly)" - meaning " she gave a loud scream" - would be fine. "She screamed out loud" would be a bit odd, unless she was dreaming and screaming out loud in her sleep. It means that the scream was vocalised, and other people could have heard it.

  8. 21 mars 2020 · Mar 21, 2020. #1. Hello! I am currently writing a story and I don't know what onomatopoeia to use for screaming. I don't want to use ahhh or aaiie type of sounds because it is a scene where the character is screaming not from pain, but from a nightmare. This is giving me a such a hard time... I will give a little bit of the writing so you get ...

  9. 23 avr. 2021 · The verb we expect is whistle, but when a kettle whistles very loudly, scream seems the most plausible descriptive term of the four on offer. While shout and cry are clearly unsuitable, squeal is far from impossible, and there is not a lot of reason to prefer scream to it. multi-cross-posted Oh my goodness, look who it is! Welcome back, boozer!

  10. 9 oct. 2013 · Senior Member. "Scream at the top of his lungs" is an idiom. It does not make any logical sense, but it has been around for many years and it means to scream as loudly as possible. I have never heard "scream from the top of your lungs" before I saw it here, but if it is used in a song lyric anything is possible.

  1. Recherches associées