noisy+commotion

  • 101bustle — bus·tle || bÊŒsl n. commotion, uproar, lively activity v. be noisy; hurry, rush, run around …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 102bustled — bus·tle || bÊŒsl n. commotion, uproar, lively activity v. be noisy; hurry, rush, run around …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 103bustles — bus·tle || bÊŒsl n. commotion, uproar, lively activity v. be noisy; hurry, rush, run around …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 104flapping — n. loose back and forth movement, fluttering (often noisy); moving up and down (of wings, arms, etc.) flæp n. loose back and forth movement; sound made by such a movement; moveable part attached only on one side (usually hangs loosely or covers… …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 105raise hell — informal 1) they were hollering and raising hell Syn: cause a disturbance, cause a commotion, be noisy, run riot, run wild, go on the rampage, be out of control; informal raise the roof 2) he raised hell with the planners Syn: remonstrate,… …

    Thesaurus of popular words

  • 106Still — adj Still, stilly, quiet, silent, noiseless can all mean making no stir or noise. Still applies to what is motionless or at rest, often with the further implication of hush or absence of sound; sometimes one implication is stressed, sometimes the …

    New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • 107fracas — n 1. uproar, commotion, disturbance, tumult, turmoil; brawl, fight, wrangle, rough and tumble, tussle, donnybrook, brannigan, Inf. scrap, Sl. rhubarb, Scot. sturt; rumpus, scramble, scuffle, brouhaha, free for all, fray, affray, Inf. ruckus;… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 108wild — adj 1. undomesticated, untamed, feral, ferine, (of animals) Law. ferae naturae, unbroken; uncultivated, native, natural. 2. uninhabited, empty, barren, waste; desolate, forsaken, godforsaken, isolated, lifeless; unsettled, unvisited, unfrequented …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 109coil — I [[t]kɔɪl[/t]] v. t. 1) to wind into continuous rings one above the other or one around the other 2) to gather (rope, wire, etc.) into loops: Coil the garden hose and hang it up[/ex] 3) to form rings, spirals, etc 4) to follow a winding course… …

    From formal English to slang

  • 110rumpus — rum•pus [[t]ˈrʌm pəs[/t]] n. 1) a noisy or violent disturbance; commotion 2) a heated controversy • Etymology: 1755–65; orig. uncert …

    From formal English to slang