Word: yelled
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...tthink of myself as an angry person, but perhaps those around me would say otherwise.I’m pretty easy-going.RR: So how’d you get the angriest part?JW: I guess I do a good angry impression. I can get my voice up there and yell, Iguess. But still, I’m not a very angry person.RR: Well, who’s the angriest person you know?JW: The angriest person I know is probably one of my roommates. He gets madabout little things. We all get a lot of laughs out of it, which...
...their arms in an aggressive manner near the kiosk at 1400 Mass. Ave. The individual then stood in front of the officer’s vehicle and began to pound on the window and attempted to open the vehicle door. Officers exited the vehicle and the individual continued to yell in a confrontational manner. Christopher M. Meara, 36, was then placed under arrest...
With 33 seconds left in overtime, Donato animatedly waves at center Doug Rogers, telling him what he missed on the last shift. Just moments later, Donato screams at the referees for a timeout and must yell for quite some time before he is granted one at the very last second...
...Officers were dispatched to the Holyoke Center to a report of an individual causing a disturbance. Officers arrived and spoke to the reporting party who stated that an individual entered the building, yelled at another individual and poured water on the floor. The individual then yelled at the reporting party and left the building. Officers located the individual who had an active trespass warning for all of Harvard University property. The individual then began to yell and put his hands on one of the officers. George E. Despotes, 63, of Cambridge, MA was then placed under arrest and charged with...
People have always multitasked behind the wheel: They smoke, brush their teeth, put on makeup, yell at the kids in the back seat. But the recent explosion in wireless technology has introduced a host of new and more complicated driver's side activities, like programming navigation systems, text messaging (which is even more dangerous than talking on the phone) and using laptops. "The distractions now are more cognitively demanding," says Strayer. "Now instead of short manual tasks like lighting a cigarette or changing the radio station, they have become mind-occupied tasks that take longer, placing a greater demand...