Verb
We saw people yelling for help.
I heard someone yelling my name.
The crowd was yelling wildly. Noun
the crowd gave a yell of approval
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Verb
The goal is to watch some baseball and yell at people along the way.—Grant Brisbee, New York Times, 12 Oct. 2025 So, when peace activist Abbie Hoffman crashed the stage and started yelling into guitarist Pete Townshend's microphone, Townshend was having none of it.—Diane J. Cho, PEOPLE, 11 Oct. 2025
Noun
And those yells are led by Yell Leaders—not cheerleaders.—Kristen Tribe, Southern Living, 10 Oct. 2025 When the LookFantastic team yell cut, Hague’s posse immediately resumes filming on the second season of Behind It All from the dressing room.—Lily Ford, HollywoodReporter, 9 Oct. 2025 See All Example Sentences for yell
Word History
Etymology
Verb
Middle English yellen, going back to Old English giellan, gyllan, going back to Germanic *gellan- (whence also Old High German kellen, gellen "to make a shrill sound," Old Norse gjalla "to scream"), perhaps a back-formation from *gullōn-, iterative derivative of *galan- "to sing, cry" — more at nightingale
Noun
Middle English yel, yelle, derivative of yellen "to yell entry 1"
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