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cackle
[kak-uhl]
verb (used without object)
to utter a shrill, broken sound or cry, as of a hen.
to laugh in a shrill, broken manner.
to chatter noisily; prattle.
verb (used with object)
to utter with cackles; express by cackling.
They cackled their disapproval.
noun
the act or sound of cackling.
chatter; idle talk.
cackle
/ ˈæə /
verb
(intr) (esp of a hen) to squawk with shrill notes
(intr) to laugh or chatter raucously
(tr) to utter in a cackling manner
noun
the noise or act of cackling
noisy chatter
informalto stop chattering; be quiet
Other Word Forms
- cackler noun
- ˈ noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of cackle1
Word History and Origins
Origin of cackle1
Example Sentences
Here, her incorrigible Eleanor barks at a grocery store clerk to fetch the kosher pickles and cackles with glee informing her grandson that his mother’s high school nickname was the “class mattress.”
As the people with microphones and notebooks pushed and shoved in a hot and muggy hallway--”We don’t air-condition the corridors in this county,” cackled one old observer--it suddenly became apparent.
Their giant, phony smiles reminded me of dolphins circling their prey and their mean laughter is blended into the sound of cackling birds.
This invective is delivered with a sneer, a wink, and finally a cackle of laughter.
“I got out of drama school with a s—load of debt,” he says, erupting in another cackle.
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