cry for help
English
editPronunciation
editAudio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
editcry for help (plural cries for help)
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see cry, for, help.
- We heard the drowning woman's cries for help and ran to assist.
- (idiomatic) Acting out as a means of displaying a subconscious desire for attention or help.
- In her second year at the school Alexis stopped doing her homework and would often scribble on walls. Her teachers wondered whether this was a cry for help, or if she was simply misbehaving.
- 2023 February 20, Vanessa Friedman, quoting Tucker Carlson, “Don Lemon, Nikki Haley and the Lessons of a Hoodie”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
- Tucker Carlson (also a jacket and tie guy) picked up on the hoo-ha on his Fox News show, calling the hoodie-jacket combination a “cry for help” and inviting Roger Stone, the disgraced former political operative and author of his own “Best and Worst dressed List,” to comment.
Translations
editcry for help
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acting out as a means of displaying a subconscious desire for attention or help
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