cackle
English
Etymology
From Middle English caclen, cakelen. Compare Dutch kakelen (“to cackle”), German Low German kakeln (“to cackle”), German kakeln (“to blather”), Danish kagle (“to cackle”), Swedish kackla (“to cackle”). Compare also Old English cahhetan, ċeahhettan (“to laugh loudly; cackle”), German gackern (“to cackle”).
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ækəl
Noun
cackle (countable and uncountable, plural cackles)
Translations
cry of a hen or goose, especially when laying an egg
Verb
cackle (third-person singular simple present cackles, present participle cackling, simple past and past participle cackled)
- (intransitive) to make a sharp, broken noise or cry, as a hen or goose does
- Shakespeare
- When every goose is cackling.
- Shakespeare
- (intransitive) To laugh with a broken sound similar to a hen's cry.
- 1918, W. B. Maxwell, chapter 2, in The Mirror and the Lamp:
- She was a fat, round little woman, richly apparelled in velvet and lace, […]; and the way she laughed, cackling like a hen, the way she talked to the waiters and the maid, […]—all these unexpected phenomena impelled one to hysterical mirth, and made one class her with such immortally ludicrous types as Ally Sloper, the Widow Twankey, or Miss Moucher.
- The witch cackled evilly.
-
- (intransitive) to talk in a silly manner; to prattle
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Johnson to this entry?)
Synonyms
- See also Thesaurus:laugh
Translations
to make a sharp, broken noise or cry, as a hen or goose does
to laugh with a sound similar to a hen's cry
See also
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