Shouted
in sentence
494 examples of Shouted in a sentence
At the moment when Jim Carrey started butt-talking, my dad
shouted
out: "Lee, he's crazy!"
Perhaps we are better off having not seen him, but the outside of that nightclub came alive when JStew
shouted.
The real Lombard was hardly such and while she used the language that Clayburgh
shouted
over and over again in the film, in reality it did not come off in the cheap manner that Clayburgh performed it in.
From what is shown, all the viewer can gather is that those who are already gifted are given the best opportunities and those who struggle are left to struggle but as long as the money keeps coming in, they can stay in the school to be
shouted
at and verbally abused.
Agitated members
shouted
their dissatisfaction (one rather melodramatically tearing up the draft bill), and the Rajya Sabha’s chairman, Indian Vice-President Hamid Ansari, halted the proceedings without a vote.
“He didn’t have to intervene in Syria,” they
shouted.
And this is greeted on both sides of the aisle with a shrug, as if intentionally drowning out one’s colleagues with
shouted
slogans were just another parliamentary maneuver, as valid as a filibuster or an adjournment motion.
Eventually, Abe shouted, “I am not addressing a crowd shouting like you!”
It should not have come as a surprise when protesters shouted, “Let go of Syria; think about us.”
Once, awakened by a nightmare, I
shouted
for her in panic.
The male, bearded, skull-cap-wearing protesters
shouted
in unison their agreement with speakers who denounced the International Crimes Tribunal.
Efforts in 1823 and 1856 to pass laws constraining free speech were
shouted
down by members of Parliament using very modern-sounding objections: any curtailment of press freedom constituted a “slippery slope,” while one man’s sedition or blasphemy was another man’s common-sense opinion.
We have
shouted
it from every platform in the country: end corruption and abuse of power for personal and partisan gain.
Mobs
shouted
at Tunisian women demonstrators to go back to the kitchen “where they belong.”
Britain’s suffragettes shouted, as they fought for – and won – the right to vote 100 years ago.
“The press lies!” demonstrators
shouted
in Warsaw and burned Party-controlled newspapers.
Outside the courthouse, groups of onlookers
shouted
“Vergogna!
Such demands escalated dramatically after Hariri’s death, as tens of thousands of the former prime minister’s partisans, who previously sat on the fence when it came to Syria,
shouted
“Syria out.”
According to French investigators, the man reportedly
shouted
“Allahu Akbar” while viciously killing her.
People killed others to safeguard Mao, and those who were executed
shouted
“Long Live Chairman Mao” on their way to death.
Back then, the custodians of neutrality would have
shouted
down any hint of collaboration with NATO and the West as an act of treason.
Then came the fateful call,
shouted
by perhaps one or two people but soon picked up by others: “Down with Ceausescu!”
He meticulously recounted occasions in which masked men – members of a gang backed by the local government –
shouted
racial epithets at him and beat him nearly to death, then showed us physical scars that supported his claims.
Arguing that the occasion is un-Indian because it celebrates romantic love, they have attacked couples holding hands on February 14, trashed stores selling Valentine’s Day greeting cards, and
shouted
slogans outside cafes while couples canoodled inside.
We are all Algerians,” protesters in Algiers
shouted.
For example, Trump recently
shouted
to the press corps assembled on the White House driveway that the whistleblower’s charges were all “lies,” even though the charges have been broadly confirmed by witnesses before the committees.
Warnings and calls to disperse could be heard from loudspeakers, but these were mixed with a selection of Soviet-era songs, over which the protesters
shouted.
Similarly, in Grodno, when a regime apparatchik tried to organize workers to proclaim their support for Lukashenko, they all
shouted
Tikhanovskaya’s name instead.
In front of the headquarters of the KGB, which holds many detainees, protesters shouted, “Let them out!”
According to one popular story, a young man who
shouted
in Red Square that the decrepit Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev was an idiot ended up being sentenced to 25.5 years in prison – six months for insulting the Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, and 25 years for revealing state secrets.
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