JEER vs BARRACK: NOUN
- A railing remark or reflection; a scoff; a taunt; a biting jest; a flout; a jibe; mockery.
- An extra capstan usually placed between the foremast and mainmast.
- Showing your contempt by derision
- A huff; a pet.
- An assemblage or combination of tackles, for hoisting or lowering the lower yards of a ship.
- A gear; a tackle.
- Nautical, tackle for hoisting or lowering the lower yards of a man-of-war: usually in the plural.
- A scoff; a taunt; a flout; a gibe; a mock.
- A scoffing or taunting remark or shout.
- A building used to house military personnel
- A large building, or a collection of huts or cabins, especially within a common inclosure, in which large numbers of men are lodged.
- A straw-thatched roof supported by four posts, under which hay is kept, and which is capable of being raised or lowered at pleasure.
- A building for soldiers, especially when in garrison. Commonly in the pl., originally meaning temporary huts, but now usually applied to a permanent structure or set of buildings.
- A movable roof sliding on four posts, to cover hay, straw, etc.
- Primitive structure resembling a long shed or barn for (usually temporary) housing or other purposes
- Any very plain, monotonous, or ugly large building
- A police station.
- A building or group of buildings used to house military personnel
- A building for lodging soldiers, especially in garrison; a permanent building or range of buildings in which both officers and men are lodged in fortified towns or other places.
JEER vs BARRACK: VERB
- Laugh at with contempt and derision
- To utter sarcastic or mocking comments; to speak with mockery or derision; to use taunting language.
- To mock; treat with mockery; to taunt; to flout.
- Lodge in barracks
- Urge on or encourage especially by shouts
- To house military personnel; to quarter.
- To live in barracks.
- To jeer and heckle; to attempt to disconcert by verbal means.
- To cheer for a team; to jeer at the opposition team or at the umpire (after an adverse decision).
- Spur on or encourage especially by cheers and shouts
- Laugh at with contempt and derision
JEER vs BARRACK: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To utter sarcastic or scoffing reflections; to speak with mockery or derision; to use taunting language; to scoff.
- To abuse vocally; taunt.
- To speak or shout derisively; mock.
- To live or lodge in barracks.
JEER vs BARRACK: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To treat with scoffs or derision; to address with jeers; to taunt; to flout; to mock at.
- To supply with barracks; to establish in barracks.
JEER vs BARRACK: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To make a mock of some person or thing; scoff: as, to jeer at one in sport.
- To treat with scoffs or derision; make a mock of; deride; flout.
- Synonyms Gibe, Scoff, etc. See sneer.
- To lodge or reside in barracks.
- To house in barracks; lodge in barracks, as troops.
- To jeer at or deride opponents; specifically, with for (like the equivalent United States slang root), to support, as a partizan, by cheers, shouts, and other demonstrations of approval, or by jeering at and noisily disturbing and interrupting the opposite side or party: as, to barrack for the school team.
JEER vs BARRACK: RELATED WORDS
- Hooted, Cheer, Scomm, Chiack, Booing, Heckle, Deride, Taunt, Boo, Barrack, Mockery, Gibe, Flout, Scoff, Scoffing
- Hall, House, Shack, Camp, Hut, Inspire, Urge on, Pep up, Flout, Urge, Exhort, Scoff, Gibe, Cheer, Jeer
JEER vs BARRACK: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Chant, Make fun, Cheer, Scomm, Chiack, Booing, Heckle, Deride, Taunt, Boo, Barrack, Mockery, Gibe, Flout, Scoff
- Station, Bunkhouse, House, Shack, Camp, Hut, Inspire, Urge on, Pep up, Flout, Urge, Exhort, Scoff, Gibe, Cheer
JEER vs BARRACK: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Another cool feature is that the crowd will cheer or jeer your progress depending where you are placed.
- Many swimmers chat and jeer as they enter the waters for the race.
- Rather than experiencing horror, the visitors of the justice park laugh and jeer.
- The school children shout, they jeer, and laugh, as they say: Aye!
- He shoved her at a group of dirty pirates who began to hoot and jeer.
- Africans, however, cannot laugh and jeer at these other countries with high caseloads.
- By what right do they jeer at Christians because their bodies are unburied?
- Will not heckle, jeer, or distract members of the opposing team.
- You were ready enough to jeer at me for a dupe.
- Taunt, jeer, derision, io taunt, jeer, a jeercr, derider.
- Each fort contains a barrack for the garrison.
- Barrack RL, versus closed kinetic exercises ligament reconstruction.
- Nichols JF, Rauh MJ, Barrack MT, et al.
- Order to pay Philip Barrack for recruiting expenses.
- Barrack was deposed in the probe last month.
- Frank was not aloof from barrack life activities.
- President Barrack Obama should have emphasized India for.
- Barrack tinggal menempuh jalan yang lebih luas terbentang.
- Yes, they had a barrack for married couples and they had barrack for singles, yes.
- BARRACK Schulz and the four German soldiers are about to enter the barrack.
JEER vs BARRACK: QUESTIONS
- What is the answer to the New York Times crossword clue jeer?
- Are there other crossword clues that share the same answer with jeer?
- What did cheer and jeer say about the middle finger emoji?
- What is going on with barrack's alleged work on behalf of the UAE?
- What is the new barrack shirt for the British Army?
- Who is Thomas Barrack and why did he plead not guilty?
- Was there a military cemetery on Barrack's Hill in Ottawa?
- How much did Trent Barrett's Barrack Point home sell for?
- Do Lisa Gallagher and Keeley Donovan work from the Barrack Road?
- How do I get from Barrack Square to Elizabeth Quay?
- Why is Barrackpore called the first British barrack in India?
- Did you barrack for Richmond in the forties & fifties?
- How did Tom Barrack become friends with Donald Trump?