Roar at Meaning in English
expression
ˈɹɔɹ/ /ˈæt
ROR-at
ɹˈɔː/ /ˈæt
RAW-at
Definición
To make a loud, deep sound at someone or something, like a lion; also, to shout angrily at someone.
Uso & Matices
Common in both literal (animals) and figurative (angry shouting) senses. Often used with animals (especially lions), but with people it implies very loud, angry yelling. More vivid than just 'shout at'.
Spanish: rugir a - gritarle aPortuguese (BR): rugir para - gritar comPortuguese (PT): rugir para - gritar comChinese (Simplified): 对...咆哮 - 朝...怒吼Chinese (Traditional): 對...咆哮 - 朝...怒吼Hindi: पर गरजना - पर जोर से चिल्लानाArabic: يُزَمْجِر في وجهBengali: গর্জন করা - চিৎকার করা (রাগে)Russian: рявкать на - рычать наJapanese: (~に)ほえる - (~に)怒鳴るVietnamese: gầm lên với - quát tháo vàoKorean: 고함치다 - 으르렁거리다Turkish: kükremek - bağırmak (öfkeyle)Urdu: دہاڑنا (کسی پر زور سے چلّانا)Indonesian: menggeram pada - membentak
Oraciones de Ejemplo
The lion roared at the frightened zebra.
basic
His father roared at him for breaking the window.
basic
Please don't roar at your friends when you get angry.
basic
My boss roared at me when I missed the deadline.
natural
The crowd roared at the winning goal.
natural
She doesn't just talk—sometimes she really roars at people when she's upset.
natural