ashriek

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

a- +‎ shriek

Adjective[edit]

ashriek (not comparable)

  1. Shrieking; filled (with shrieking people, animals, etc.).
    • 1918, Geoffrey Dearmer, “Reality”, in Poems,[1], London: Heinemann, page 55:
      For I have swept along
      To foam ashriek with gulls, and rowed behind
      Brown oarsmen swinging to an ocean song
    • 1954, Alfred Chester, “The Head of a Sad Angel”, in Behold Goliath[2], New York: Random House, published 1964, page 228:
      She took me through the apartment, through all the ten rooms—each with a chandelier ashriek, and ourselves mirrored on the windows—which I had never seen.
    • 1997, Ted Hughes (translator), excerpt from Part 4 of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, in Daniel Weissbort (ed.), Selected Translations, New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, p. 168,[3]
      It sounded like a scythe a-shriek on a grind-stone!
    • 2005, Carole Nelson Douglas, chapter 26, in Cat in a Hot Pink Pursuit,[4], New York: Forge, page 159:
      [] the ’tween dining area [] was ashriek with excited girls

Anagrams[edit]