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How To Use Stomp In A Sentence

  • Do you really want ambient and drum'n'bass remixers stomping on your world music? Times, Sunday Times
  • It's got the whole indie-hillbilly thing going, with lots of mandolins and footstomping and fuzzy guitars etc but it's all just a little flat.
  • Ladies in Blue," a tribute to the pill-popping entourage that surrounded the "Iron Butterfly," as she was known, recalls the cooing stomp of ABBA; Kate Pierson of the B-52s belts "The Whole Man" as if it's one of her own hits. TIME.com: Top Stories
  • Vigorously he hops and stomps along with the music.
  • Upon noticing the new appliance, he stomped his little feet and clapped with joy.
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  • Vibrations from instruments such as the talking drum or the didgeridoo, or even from foot-stomping dances, may have spoken volumes to distant, unshod listeners.
  • Even the shoes, booties with vertiginous heels, were covered in grasping little coral-like tentacles that shook as the models -- their faces abloom with gold and colorful stripes -- stomped down the catwalk. Balmain, Zac Posen, Rick Owens & Manish Arora Out Of This World In Paris (PHOTOS, POLL)
  • The floor began to vibrate from all of the feet stomping and dancing.
  • And unlike the previous use of archaic folk tunes, Cajun stomps and swamp water boogies just don't have the same traditionalist staying power.
  • The tenor saxophonist's rousing stomps and sensitive ballads are deeply imprinted in his fans' memories.
  • Above the drums, singing, and stomping of feet, women ululate shrilly to express their excitement.
  • He woke up in a bad mood and stomped off to the bathroom.
  • It's just a straightforward almost glam stomp about being angry. The Sun
  • By way of contrast, Mojo Box represents a return to form: a lean, dandy album of greasy stomps, twangy guitars, and good songs.
  • A little bit of attention and a few small victories do not change the fact that you are still, for the most part, a novelty act, like a horse that can count by stomping its hooves.
  • I stomped around and laughed while she wiggled, pranced and sang along to the music like all the other teenagers.
  • And then I stomped around the departure lounge shouting at people for having the wrong shaped hair. The Sun
  • With a bit of a fishtail I'm stomping the pedals to accelerate again.
  • The dancers all look like they're more suited to stomping on grapes in a vineyard.
  • She stomped her way through Bruch's violin concerto last year to little payoff. Stomp me if you've heard this one before
  • I guess he'll try to reach his old stomping ground to drum up support.
  • As if on cue, the chestnut roan he had given her to ride stomped its hoof in agreement, undoubtedly tired and hungry herself.
  • She cried and stomped her foot and sulked because I had won.
  • Since the new 2004 model was introduced in the fall, the Prius has been stomping the Hummer.
  • She nods frantically, distractedly, ponytail slicing a semi-circle through the air as she about-faces for a new strip of floor to stomp across.
  • The bluesy southern stomp of Beautiful Sorta, with its restless energy and reckless singing, is doused in drink and James Dean fatalism, and finds Adams flailing around for the arms of a good woman to cling to.
  • But he doesn't do emotion or much like the idea of stomping about his own unexplored psychic terrain without a map. Times, Sunday Times
  • Why isn't the FBI stomping the guts out of those mexican nationals "patroling" Staten Yahoo! Buzz US: Top Stories
  • She noisily chewed on her gum, stomping to the seat adjacent to mine, not bothering to reply until she'd settled comfortably with said boots crossed upon the desk.
  • She stomped through the entryway and without bothering to look through the peephole, yanked the door wide.
  • I stomped noisily into my bedroom and sat on my swiveling chair.
  • Just another reason The Worldwide Leader stomps the competition.
  • The infectious glam stomp of the closer Retreat explodes in delirious joy, a fitting high note on which to end. Times, Sunday Times
  • One by one ten guards clad in dull armor emerged from the entrance and stomped heavily towards the waiting Rathgal Tayotos and Shase.
  • This is the top of Pole Hill, a wooded hillock in Norman Tebbitt's old stomping round of Chingford.
  • Careening back onto the highway, spraying gravel as he went, Jack stomped on the accelerator and gave chase.
  • Doesn't mean it isn't an absolute stomper, though, or that rugby would be better off without it. Times, Sunday Times
  • ‘You guys are a bunch of screwballs!’ the girl said and stomped out of the shop.
  • With helmets and pads we make ready the battle To stomp on each other like half-crazy cattle.
  • They took cold-sleep easily-when you shipped swine, half your breeding stock arrived as pork-and they could look out for themselves in many ways; a mule could stomp a wild loper to death. \par Time Enough For Love
  • Like Aerosmith at its best, Buckcherry has both the rhythmic sway to go with its rock-and-roll stomp and the raw charisma to get away with its period pretensions.
  • Grenville wowed the crowds at many speedways nationwide, including his home stomping ground, the Lismore Speedway.
  • By the time she is stomping to ‘You're So Square’ or bringing the bop with the magnificent Mingus track ‘God Must Be a Boogie Man,’ she has won us over.
  • He shook raindrops from his smooth blond hair and stomped his feet on the sisal mat. SLEEP WHILE I SING
  • There was the glass, cone shaped mountain that appeared out of nowhere, after the throng had finished stomping me.
  • I have opened my gardens to tourists and they stomp round the manor with glee, yet the cost of repairing the damage they wreak is not even recouped by the fee. …incompatible technologies « Sven’s guide to…
  • In addition, the Connery household apparently play loud music at unsociable hours and generally ‘stomp about’.
  • He tried to stamp out the fire and succeeded in stomping on her foot.
  • This thing fits in so well with the Goner aesthetic you'd have thunk that Eric himself played in the band - it's rollicking, R & B-driven gutbucket rock and roll, perfect for a Saturday night beer stomp where only 40 oz. specials are served.
  • Several weekends ago on Governors Island, well over a thousand people were dancing to a 12-piece orchestra that played mostly foxtrots, shifting from red-hot stomps by Fletcher Henderson to smooth two-beat show tunes by George Gershwin. A Retro Jazz Movement With a Good Dance Beat
  • Do you really want ambient and drum'n'bass remixers stomping on your world music? Times, Sunday Times
  • Swinging her bag onto her back, she turned round and stomped off.
  • This starts with Yat-kha mimicking the horns and cymbals of the monks, then slowly builds through a stately procession to a whirligig masked stomp.
  • On the other side of the window, lightning pitchforked down through the sky and thunder clamored like it was stomping on the roof. Crescendo
  • He pointed at her fine steed, which was currently occupied with kicking his hind legs in the air and stomping and snorting like an unbroken colt.
  • She stomped her way across the room, grabbed her by the arms of her black fishnet sleeves and collar shirt and planted a kiss on her.
  • Then imagine yourself surrounded by sizzling synths, drunken piano stomps, and lock-step pirate rhythms.
  • The drum machine offbeats are still present, but instead of snarky basslines and slow grinds, the song features a wistfully high organ stomp, and shifting tempos throughout.
  • At the photo call, he was roundly booed when he stomped off after only 15 seconds. Times, Sunday Times
  • Luckily the performers had enough energy to rouse even this heat-weary crowd, with one dance after another full of high-powered jumps, stomps, shimmies, and kicks.
  • Don't u just have to stomp about and look angry? The Sun
  • After clearing his head he stomped off to the staircase and mounted the stairs to his room.
  • One wrestler went too far off script and stomped to death a fellow athletic thespian.
  • The seven-piece Keighley band has released its first album mixing covers, traditional songs and self-written stompers.
  • He got up and began screaming, crying and stomping his feet.
  • I would stomp my little feet until they followed me out to the living room, to the tree, where I would proceed to unwrap all my presents while my parents watched me with a sort of dazed remove.
  • I relished each snort and stomp from our mounts as we rode along the grey dusty road.
  • Next thing you know, Gareth caught the spark and went for the big ollie, kicking it out and severely stomping his heel.
  • Here, its upbeat graveyard stomp, engulfed in Townsend's studied licks and organist Kyle Forester's perspicuous interludes recalls what the soundtrack to much-revered London niterie The Batcave must have sounded like back in 1982. Drowned In Sound // Feed
  • Wasteland" (from A Frames 2) is a schizophrenic stomper with a funereal bass line, lots of jaunty tambourine, and lyrics that perfectly wed two senses of the word smoldering: "I want to watch the smoke rise/I want to look in your eyes/I want your hand in my hand/I want to walk the wasteland. Chicago Reader
  • The league is literally ruined when one team stomps the competition game after game.
  • At any moment you half expect a fearsome creature to stomp out of the swamp and ferns. Times, Sunday Times
  • No more bubbly electroid jump here; at its most distinctive, this record unleashes rhythm-happy stomps that kick and clap like black-college step routines.
  • I shivered in disgust, stomping past them into the hallway.
  • The mood has switched to that of a sleepover, as she lets me try on her shoes and stomp about in them madly. Times, Sunday Times
  • There he goes, stomping around the stage on one whole leg and another that ends at the knee and continues as a wooden stump. Times, Sunday Times
  • And pumped up they are, stomping and cheering, ringing cowbells, and making odd mooing sounds from homemade PVC didgeridoos.
  • If he had ever trod his ancestral acres either for pleasure or profit he might in time have "stomped out" the whiteweed, so the neighbors said, for he had the family foot, the size of an anvil; but he much preferred a sedentary life, and the whiteweed went on seeding itself from year to year. Ladies-In-Waiting
  • There he goes, stomping around the stage on one whole leg and another that ends at the knee and continues as a wooden stump. Times, Sunday Times
  • In a fit of childish fitfulness, I stomped my feet this morning and said I don't * care* if I'll pay for it later, I'm Not Working Today. Bunchalittlestuff
  • He stomped the country in the weeks before polling day giving energetic speeches, described by some as 3-hour harangues.
  • You recollect old man Snyder who died on the trail that time he got stomped by a bronc.
  • We stomp about the office with a great wad of paperwork when, really, we're wondering whether to have tea or hot chocolate from the machine.
  • Her husband, a tall, stout fellow who probably wrestles alligators for fun, stomps ahead, engrossed in the sports pages of the paper.
  • All the beautiful little hints of intrigue were stomped down with movie-length hobnail boots. MIND MELD: SciFi TV Shows That Deserve A Remake (with Videos)
  • Gatha stomped his way up the gangway, working his fury out on the iron grillwork. Bloodlines
  • Then he lights into a determined stomp, accompanied by the suave growl of Leon singing ‘My Walking Stick.’
  • I had to brush myself down and stomp my feet on the doormat.
  • It starts in a traditional indie style, building to a climax before breaking into an incredible disco stomp.
  • He looked like a whole roomful of demons had stomped all over him, which wasn't too far from the truth, I guess.
  • She nods frantically, distractedly, ponytail slicing a semi-circle through the air as she about-faces for a new strip of floor to stomp across.
  • At the photo call, he was roundly booed when he stomped off after only 15 seconds. Times, Sunday Times
  • In Jazz, the half-moons on Dorcas's cheeks and forehead indirectly testify to the torture she endured as a child, when she witnessed her father and mother stomped and burned to death during the East St. Louis riots.
  • Bolivians in golden cowboy boots, a South African woman in miners' gumboots, and six dignified Lebanese men holding hands all stomped merrily.
  • Celia stomped her foot into the soft grassy ground, but the sound of it went unheard.
  • The streets around the state house in Boston certainly paved with history and maybe gold, too, because it seems that Paul Revere's old stomping grounds cost a pretty penney. CNN Transcript Nov 28, 2006
  • She stomped out to the front of the store in a huff, slamming the dividing door behind her.
  • Led by Souhair herself - she goes by the one name only - the troupe stomps, shakes and wiggles its way through a veil dance, folk pieces from Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, a couple of flamenco numbers and the ubiquitous belly dance.
  • He stomps in without stopping to divest himself of his sombrero, spurs or pistols.
  • Luckily the performers had enough energy to rouse even this heat-weary crowd, with one dance after another full of high-powered jumps, stomps, shimmies, and kicks.
  • And then I stomped around the departure lounge shouting at people for having the wrong shaped hair. The Sun
  • Jeff grinned as he stomped on a few switches on his distortion pedal, and a second later was pounding out the heavy rift.
  • He used to wear Doc-Marten boots on stage, as he stomped around so hard on the stage, often breaking the wooden planking as his feet added another dimension to the rhythm section.
  • Shaggy yaks stomp around threshing circles, ears of barley are thrashed with sticks and winnowed by singing villagers in twos and threes.
  • Enter," he said wryly as the clumping and stomping of ironshod feet halted just outside the tent flap. War of the Twins
  • Dans la journee je verifie le rouge s'est estompé c qq peu rosé ... et s'estompe les heures passant ... pour ne laisser que deux gross veine rouge et qq nervure sur les coté. Pinku-tk Diary Entry
  • Male dancers stomp and leap while waving pieces of cloth and jingling bells.
  • I stomped around the house shutting doors, slamming drawers, and picking items up off the floor. Christianity Today
  • He began stomping his feet on the floor sending plaster raining down on the man and the woman.
  • They sit on the bleachers inside Matthews Arena and clap and stomp and cheer their lungs out when the Huskies score.
  • Yet Streep stomps on them all like she's Godzilla, delivering one of the great hambone performances of our time.
  • Its chateau, overlooking the vine-flanked valley, and its perched, rose-petaled village, were once the residence and the stomping grounds of Madame de Sévigné, who wrote prolifically to her fille. Travel
  • I yelled at the dweebs in the kitchen, and stomped out to my room.
  • At one point he climbs on top of the bar and stomps around, all the while screaming into the microphone some incomprehensible lyrics that may well have been poetry in the class of Byron or Betjeman, but no one would know.
  • A jackboot serial killer on the loose, stomping down the humanist softies of soul?
  • Lifting her arms skyward, the beautiful Sara Baras thrusts out her chest and fiercely stomps her feet, embodying the tragic Mariana Pineda, the complex heroine of her most successful theater piece.
  • I don't want a "stomper", I don't want a "ballad", I want something new. Undefined
  • His energy in concert was quite inspiring, each song found him stomping about the stage, singing in a high tenor with sparse instrumentation provided by an acoustic guitar.
  • Just goes to show that if you build it, they will come - and they'll snap their fingers and stomp their feet the whole time.
  • The Harlem Gospel Choir is a really rousing outfit with its foot-stomping, hand-clapping blues and spirituals.
  • For a second I felt bad about what I said, but my anger quickly came back as I stomped up the stairs.
  • It will either stomp or be stomped, but most races can field enough footsloggers to weather the storm.
  • Still, as the album closes with another dawn-colored stomp, you can't help but feel déjà vu.
  • As Mr. Heneghan, 42, raked the strings of his vintage 1920s Kay Craft guitar and stomped his foot in time to the music, Ms. Brower, 38, strummed her nickel-plated brass ukulele, took solo turns on a plastic kazoo and belted out a set of nearly forgotten tunes. The Modern Sounds of Antique Music
  • Brigitte glared at him, turned on her heel , and stomped out of the room.
  • Was seen stomping opponents in brawl with Florida International. One more season vaulted Landry to top of draft stock
  • When he's really mad, he stomps his feet and I just think that's so adorable.
  • He angrily stomped his cricket after failing the fight.
  • She stomped on the accelerator a few times on side streets that had the traffic flow to allow her to go about eighty miles an hour.
  • Some sci-fi fans are skeptical of a sequel or remade version because Toho Company practices the tradition of using live actors in rubber costumes stomping on miniatures, as opposed to modern day CGI. Godzilla Plus | SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles
  • During a red light, you know whether you have time to check that map; on a green light, you know whether to start braking a block away - or to stomp on the accelerator, as though you were a Toronto or Montreal driver.
  • Although perhaps less immediate than their debut (there are no storming stompers in the league of ‘Joe's Head’ or ‘Happy Alone’), after repeated listens, the beauty of the tracks begins to emerge.
  • If I can conquer the relentless rows of switchbacks stretching ahead of me, the payoff will be an exhilarating descent into Altdorf, the ledgendary stomping ground of Wilhelm Tell. Alpine Cycling Without (Much) Pain
  • Darren waited anxiously as he heard the stomp of hooves and a little neigh which he knew belonged to the foal.
  • I must point out that the place was spotless, I didn't see any overflowing dirt bins and papers or even stompies lying around.
  • That's why the killer bounce-and-rebound in Mario is a thousand times more satisfying than bottom-stomping baddies in a dozen other platformers, and why slicing enemies into chunks in Ninja Gaiden, screaming down out of the sky, dragon sword glinting in the neon and cherry blossom, is just more effective and exhilarating than chopping up chumps in other fighting games. Eurogamer
  • We stomp aboard, spreading more filth on the dripping bus.
  • I could run outside into the rain, stomp my bare feet on the (ten-week) uncut wet grass, and have my own private Glastonbury experience with all the comforts of home.
  • Begun as a soft, reverent chant, it was now a triumphal march, a celebratory paean accompanied by a tim - pani of sword clashing against shield, of stomping feet and clap - ping hands. Dragons of a Fallen Sun
  • “And generally, with respect to those kinds of rib fractures, that is the kind of injury that you see in instances where people have been struck with an object or in people who have been stomped or kicked, correct?” Long Way Home
  • Then a stomping noise came from behind the kids and I saw some massive black rubber boots coming slowly down the stairs.
  • But this 22-year-old stomper has lyrical mysteries. Times, Sunday Times
  • What a stamping and a stomping and a whistling. Times, Sunday Times
  • There he goes, stomping around the stage on one whole leg and another that ends at the knee and continues as a wooden stump. Times, Sunday Times
  • Later, worship at the Indian Shaker Church consisted of stomp dances with loud vocalizations and bells.
  • Mara looks very much taken aback, she steels her jaw, inhales sharply and stomps off in a strop.
  • Better just to stomp around and scowl instead. Times, Sunday Times
  • His first serving is current single, ‘Trouble’, a beefy blast of high-energy rock stomp.
  • Don't u just have to stomp about and look angry? The Sun
  • And then I stomped around the departure lounge shouting at people for having the wrong shaped hair. The Sun
  • But there's something altogether more hypnotic and powerful about Emetrex that keeps drawing you in and tugging at your ears until you're fully submerged in their bristling stoner-rock stomp.
  • There is an episode of The Simpsons in which Homer becomes so infuriated with the FOX-TV logo in the corner of his screen that he reaches out, grabs the logo and stomps on it.
  • 21: 48 Listening: Link Wray-Link Wray (Polydor, 1971, vinyl) Once in a while a slab of swamp stomp is just what a feller needs to hear. Tweets I have known
  • As Hart's bodyguard / minder, she takes this movie, flings it over her shoulder and stomps on it.
  • Clapping hands, smacking counter tops, stomping shoes on tile-they all have a nice "clank", "thud", or "bom" which delight a curious 13-month-old. Charlottesville Blogs
  • It'll be a rather quiet weekend for mondo rumpshakers, but there are a few events that'll keep the stomp in your week.
  • Thankfully, it was then that the light flashed green and I stomped on the accelerator.
  • This didn't bode well for his sister who threw up in her hands in exasperation and stomped her feet.
  • Dropping her spent butt to the ground, Becky furiously stomped out the cigarette spark.
  • She was now angry and she stomped like an unbroken horse.
  • Also, stomping all over the place in your street shoes where others tread barefoot is a health hazard.
  • If the same demographic turns out this year as did in 2008, he should stomp back into office. Times, Sunday Times
  • Smokey the Bear stomps his burly self onto the stage and starts smiling and singing.
  • If you ever happen to come across that homeless Ran-Dell ever again, make sure to wear your heaviest steel-toed boots, that way, when you repeatedly stomp in his nuts, you'll be sure to give him the worst pain possible. Archive 2010-01-01
  • And unlike the previous use of archaic folk tunes, Cajun stomps and swamp water boogies just don't have the same traditionalist staying power.
  • At a meeting with progressive bloggers yesterday, Obama addressed the stomping of the MoveOn. org activist and the rise in violence, saying, I think that one of the things that I've always tried to promote is civility in politics. From Rand Paul Stomper To Allen West's Bikers: Rise In Far-Right Violence During 2010 Elections
  • Many of them find the Stones harking back to their blues roots, whether it's on the Slim Harpo style stomp of " Who's Driving Your Plane ", or the more laid back " The Spider and The Fly".
  • Prior to Bellows, he was stomping around in mukluks, parka and snow pants patrolling missile fields in North Dakota.
  • He heard her stomp across the floor as if she were wearing combat boots.
  • On a heli-boarding day we would already be stomping around cursing our misfortune. Times, Sunday Times
  • Rising up on the folk-rock charts, New York City-based "Metrobilly" band 2/3 Goat has just released a foot-stomping, evocative and inspiring video performance from their breakthrough new CD, Stream of Conscience. Jeff Biggers: Metrobilly Band Rocks Charts With Song on Mountaintop Removal (VIDEO)
  • Filthy lucre has invaded the town, and its inhabitants would likely stomp over one another to get the last roast beast from the butcher.
  • While most of them are careful to maintain a little patch of agnostic "to be sure" territory, hectoring heretics like PZ Myers get their jollies by stomping all over sacred ground in the hobnailed boots of rationality. Clay Farris Naff: How Science Can Solve the Puzzle of God
  • From the mambo to street stomp, dance can take you back in time to the big band era, or to faraway lands like Morocco and Brazil.
  • Temporary tatts, printed co-ords and stomper boots are topping our festival fash list. Times, Sunday Times
  • A good stomp from the two-clown-long-horn followed by an "Oooohooowee my aching bunions!" used to raise roaring cachinnation. Archive 2006-04-02
  • There are also nods to the foot-stomping hoedown sounds of the Scottish and Irish settlers who stamped their musical signature on the Appalachian Mountain country of the Deep South.
  • I have purchased a pair of cordovan Mary Janes, a pair of stompy boots (Doc Martens got cheap: my last pair of gothing boots was bought in1993 and I noticed in Austin that they've sort of started to hurt my feet after four hours of dancing), and a pair of rock climbing approach shoes. I come and i cradle your face
  • With anger, all she had to do was stomp around and shout. SOMEDAY MY PRINCE
  • We're shrieking and yelling and hooting and clapping and stomping - telling this man just how much we love him.
  • The mood has switched to that of a sleepover, as she lets me try on her shoes and stomp about in them madly. Times, Sunday Times
  • When it stops seconds later and backs up to let him off for the next take, he stomps his foot in bewildered frustration.
  • She gave me a most unfriendly stare, shouldered past me and stomped off to inspect the works.
  • She stomped in, glared at me, and yowled fit to rattle the windows.
  • Sydney, in fact, has puddle stomped at the very park that the Ramona statue resides in all her puddly glory. Monday baby blogging: Ready for Rain
  • Iridescent purple swamphens, lavished with outrageous lipstick (their bills and frontal shields actually) stomp over the leaves on gigantic spider feet, bobbing their ludicrous white-handkerchief tails behind them.
  • The source material is as unobvious as having a diva like Whitney sing over a track that stomps so forcefully is a no-brainer. Fourfour:
  • Women in the crowd cheer and stomp.
  • I stomped on his toes and ran away.
  • Please recall the hissy (and shit) fit I tossed when the "Stomping on Robert Frost" -- with cute ponies by Jeffers was discussed. In the mail
  • They stomped back into the house as a gray dawn broke.
  • Or a town vacated as some stomping behemoth appeared on the horizon? THE GREAT AND SECRET SHOW
  • He mentioned that new players usually get stomped, which is par for the course. Archive 2006-03-01
  • Head back to this classic soul stomper from 2011. Times, Sunday Times
  • And by reading the newspaper accounts, she could reasonably have assumed that the plaintiff's lawyer was routinely stomping me into the courtroom floor.
  • Cassie smacks her forehead and stomps her foot.
  • The stomp dance, which has already been discussed, is a religious activity.
  • There are even signs to ask smokers, when they go on to the pavement to smoke, not to drop their stompies on the street.
  • Two squeaky-shoed and heavy-footed audience members demonstrated their passion for 20 th-century classical music by stomping out in the break after the first movement.
  • For listeners who caught the disco stomp of the ‘Giddy Up’ single from last year, you'll be surprised to hear such a downtempo record heavy with the influence of dub.

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