[
US
/ˈhɔɹd/
]
[ UK /hˈɔːd/ ]
[ UK /hˈɔːd/ ]
NOUN
- a nomadic community
- a moving crowd
- a vast multitude
How To Use horde In A Sentence
- When you see this poor guy being followed everywhere he goes by hordes of people, it's actually terribly sad.
- It's one thing to get some exercise; it's something else to repeatedly, day after day, show off in spandex before a horde of newspapermen.
- The locals will have to stay resolute in the face of the invading British hordes, but it's hard to imagine they would ever be willing to swap chorizo and fino for burgers and beer.
- I horded the dry food from the kitchen and the water bottles were stacked next to me. 365 tomorrows » 2010 » June : A New Free Flash Fiction SciFi Story Every Day
- Yet now he is dead, as dead as any ordinary pikeman who fought to hold back the Horde at the terminus of the Salmisti Bridge. Kingdoms of Light
- Making our way up the gently ascending road that cut its way through the forest, we saw hordes of greedy monkeys waiting for freebies.
- Could lupilin be responsible for the hordes of passionate hopheads that seek ever-higher levels of hops in their IPAs?
- It's not bad to be reminded that there's a whole horde of men of his generation out there in the sticks for whom the old shibboleths are pretty important.
- Hordes of journalists jostled for position outside the conference hall.
- That meant hordes of shoppers worked until yesterday, leaving presents unbought. The Sun