a. [a. L. ululant-, ululans, pres. pple. of ululāre: see next.]

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  1.  Having the character of ululation.

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1868.  G. Macdonald, R. Falconer, xxx. He burst out laughing, after a doubtful and ululant fashion.

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1901.  Edith Rickert, in Academy, 16 March, 236/2. An ululant tumult, that bounds and rebounds.

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  2.  Ululating, howling.

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1896.  A. Lang, Walton’s Angler, Introd. p. xli. They were better than Quakers, naked and ululant.

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