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View definitions for cackle

cackle

noun as in a loud laugh

verb as in laugh irritatingly

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Example Sentences

A smile, wry and lopsided, grows into a chuckle — which then escalates to a cackle most improper.

From Ozy

Just as familiar as her face to anyone who has watched TV or movies in the past 40 years are Smart’s dazzlingly deadpan line readings, her come-hither drawl and her signature sharp cackle.

For most of the film I was too mortified to actually laugh out loud, but that one got a cackle from me.

Kabakov is the Beckett of the art world, creating silences and divorcing himself from the cackle.

“I am wreaking a double vengeance,” writes Cellini, barely suppressing a cackle.

The latter, fastened by the legs to the rails of the wagons, kept up a deafening cackle.

When she heard a hen cackle she always ran to look for the nest, and one day she discovered one under the fruit-shed.

"Hold your—cackle," cried one, "he is going to sing;" and the whole party had their eyes turned with expectation towards the bird.

Her hard but not unmusical laugh had given place to a grating cackle, and a leer of affected gaiety had replaced the merry eye.

How the young hens would giggle if I did, and how the old ones would cackle!

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On this page you'll find 71 synonyms, antonyms, and words related to cackle, such as: giggle, guffaw, laugh, chortle, chuckle, and cluck.

From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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