The century dictionary and cyclopedia, a work of universal reference in all departments of knowledge with a new atlas of the world . s a different word, an aspi-rated freq. of equiv. jiiwen, reflecting L. jubi-lare: see jubilate), = Icel. yla = Sw. yla = , howl: cf. L. iilulare, howl, yell, shriek,cry out, wail, etc. (> It. urlare and ululare =Sp. aullar and ultilar = Pg. tilular = OF. huler,husler, usler, hiirler, huUer, P. liurler, howl, yell),= Gr. v7mv, bark, bay, howl; orig. imitative, andstrengthened, in Teut., etc., by aspiration; theL. form is reduplicated; so Gr. b?.o?ivZei


The century dictionary and cyclopedia, a work of universal reference in all departments of knowledge with a new atlas of the world . s a different word, an aspi-rated freq. of equiv. jiiwen, reflecting L. jubi-lare: see jubilate), = Icel. yla = Sw. yla = , howl: cf. L. iilulare, howl, yell, shriek,cry out, wail, etc. (> It. urlare and ululare =Sp. aullar and ultilar = Pg. tilular = OF. huler,husler, usler, hiirler, huUer, P. liurler, howl, yell),= Gr. v7mv, bark, bay, howl; orig. imitative, andstrengthened, in Teut., etc., by aspiration; theL. form is reduplicated; so Gr. b?.o?ivZeiv, cryaloud, Skt. uluU, uKtlu, a howling: see from owl, AS. ule, L. ulula, etc., which israther from this verb: see owl, owlet, intrans. 1. To utter a loud, prolonged, andmournful cry, as that of a dog or wolf. As soone as the catte was fallen she be-gan to whowle and to bray so lowde, that it was herde thourgh the hoste. Merlin (E. E. T. S.), iii. 668. An he had been a dog that should have howled thus,they would have hanged him; and I pray God his badvoice bode no mischief! Shak., Much Ado, ii. 3. 2907. [Scotch in both He hmvld fearfully;Said he was a wolf. Webster^ Duchess of MalU, v. 2. 2. To give out a loud wailing sound, as thewind: as, the storm liowls. The wind is howling in turret and tree. Tennyson, The Sisters. 3. To wail; lament; make a loud mournfuloutcry. Shrighte Emelye and howleth Palamon. Chaucer, Knights Tale, 1. 1959. But he sawe a barge goe from the land,And hee heard ladyes huwle and crye. Kinn Arthurs Death (Childs Ballads, I. 48). My mother weeping, my father wailing, my sister cry-ing,our maid howlint/. Shalf., T. G. of V,, ii. 3. Why do you not houl out, and fill the holdWith lamentations, cries, and base submissions,?Worthy our scorn? Fletcher, Double Marriage, ii. 3. II, trans. To utter in a loud wailing have wordsThat would be howld out in the desert air. Sliak., Macbeth, iv. howld aloud, I am on tire within. Tenny


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