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yodel
[yohd-l]
verb (used with or without object)
to sing with frequent changes from the ordinary voice to falsetto and back again, in the manner of Swiss and Tyrolean mountaineers.
to call or shout in a similar fashion.
noun
a song, refrain, etc., so sung.
a call or shout so uttered.
yodel
/ ˈəʊə /
noun
an effect produced in singing by an abrupt change of register from the chest voice to falsetto, esp in popular folk songs of the Swiss Alps
verb
to sing (a song) in which a yodel is used
Other Word Forms
- yodeler noun
- ˈǻ noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of yodel1
Word History and Origins
Origin of yodel1
Example Sentences
Here, it was pure joy to watch HORA’s actors embrace their inner hobbits, dwarves, wizards, orcs and elves — including one that yodels!
Burnett and her Tarzan yodel returned to series TV for the first time in decades with the recent arrival of Netflix’s “A Little Help With Carol Burnett.”
A rooster, or maybe two, yodeled somewhere out of sight.
In the "official" chart, Please, Please Me was denied the top spot by yodelling crooner Frank Ifield and his song Wayward Wind.
But even as he wallows in heartbreak, he still lets loose some yodels and splashy piano in the chorus.
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