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spang

[ US /ˈspæŋ/ ]
[ UK /spˈæŋ/ ]
VERB
  1. leap, jerk, bang
    Bullets spanged into the trees

How To Use spang In A Sentence

  • I dreamt last night that I went out for a drink with biscuitware and that halfway through the night he suddenly jumped up from his seat to perform an all-singing all-dancing musical number, accompanied by a well-rehearsed large chorus all in spangly costume. The One That's Still Making Me Chuckle
  • They banged out `The star-spangled banner'
  • Most visibly, it has transformed the British day out - you can't visit even the most two-bit town these days without tripping over its spangly new heritage centre or interactive museum.
  • His compendious book, then, ranges from dry speculation on geology to exquisite description of flora, spangled with remarkably apt epigrams.
  • A spangled shoal of fish swept by him, rainbow-hued, fins of intricate filigree. CORMORANT
  • the star-spangled banner
  • The language is a wild mixture of vaquero-cowboy Spanglish and the King James Bible — you ' ll find words like " pulverulence " and " sudorific, " and one character says, without a shred of irony: " Lo, would you behold what has arrived? Southwestern Gothic
  • I've heard "Hail to the Chief," I've heard the Star-Spangled Banner, many of the songs that you know so well when it comes to these kind of big celebrations. CNN Transcript Jan 11, 2009
  • And the costumes: They can't have too many spangles.
  • In a star-spangled career stretching nearly forty years Derek McCann has stonewalled every single team that has participated in Section One of the Northern Cricket Union.
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