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howling
[ hou-ling ]
adjective
- producing or uttering a howling noise:
a howling mob.
- desolate, dismal, or dreary:
a howling wilderness.
- Informal. very great; tremendous:
a howling success.
howling
/ ˈhaʊlɪŋ /
adjective
- informal.prenominal (intensifier)
a howling error
a howling success
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Derived Forms
- ˈhowlingly, adverb
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Other Words From
- howling·ly adverb
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Word History and Origins
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Example Sentences
That morning, the howling grew louder, and the rain came harder.
I watched as another officer pulled Otto’s stuffed dinosaur, Puppy, out of his toddler clutches so they could scan its fluffy body, and even after my family was out of sight, I could still hear Otto’s howling.
But few things inspire more howling from writers than that post-publication Bataan death march known as the book tour.
I had expected Alaska to be miserably cold, with howling winds and fierce storms.
Conservative groups spent Tuesday howling at Boehner's betrayal.
After all, a number of writers are howling about it and it clearly serves as an obstacle in the current era of voting.
Then, she gets on the hood of his Ferrari, hikes up her skirt, and… grinds on it to completion, howling with ecstasy.
The falling dew, and the howling wind raised him not from that bed of lonely despair.
A fearsome thunderstorm or howling tornado of dust might reveal her fickleness of mood at any moment.
And with that the host gave him such a kick as sent him howling into the street, amidst the roars of the company.
The wind is howling, and the rain is pelting against the parlour windows of the Banking-house, whose blinds are drawn close down.
For the cry is gone round about the border of Moab: the howling thereof unto Gallim, and unto the well of Elim the cry thereof.
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