[
US
/ˈfoʊmɪŋ/
]
[ UK /fˈəʊmɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /fˈəʊmɪŋ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
emitting or filled with bubbles as from carbonation or fermentation
foamy (or frothy) beer
bubbling champagne -
producing or covered with lathery sweat or saliva from exhaustion or disease
the rabid animal's frothing mouth
How To Use foaming In A Sentence
- Tumbling down slopes near Wawona at the south end of the park, Chilnualna Creek - at its fattest and fastest this time of year - creates a series of foaming cascades around giant boulders.
- Yes | No | Report from hunterkid94 wrote 43 weeks 6 days ago ive caught plenty and ive just opened the trap and they ran away. always b armed tho. if they r foaming from the mouth u will have to shoot it. When you catch a Racoon or oppossom in a live trap what do you do with it?
- These may not address their Majesties, but they may stare; nor will it be contested that the attentive circular eyes of the humble domestic creatures are an embellishment to Royal pomp and grandeur, such truly as should one day gain for them an inweaving and figurement -- in the place of bees, ermine tufts, and their various present decorations -- upon the august great robes back-flowing and foaming over the gaspy page-boys. The Egoist
- He's on his way out, and, rabid dog that he is, it's no great surprise he's going out foaming all the way.
- There is the convulsed boy foaming at the mouth and the man emerging from the tombs with an unclean spirit.
- The boat overturned, and the people in it were swept into the foaming water, but were retrieved.
- Exit char, foaming at the mouth.
- He tried to get to his feet before slumping to the ground again foaming at the mouth. The Sun
- We had to promise, for Noël was getting greener and more gurgly every minute, and at any moment Father or uncle might burst in foaming for an explanation, and none of us would have one except Noël, and him in this state of all-anyhow. New Treasure Seekers
- Privately, many figures in the literary world were also foaming at the mouth.