trampling

[ UK /tɹˈɑːmplɪŋ/ ]
[ US /ˈtɹæmpɫɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the sound of heavy treading or stomping
    he heard the trample of many feet
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How To Use trampling In A Sentence

  • The AG that should be in jail is the current AG and the POTUS for war crimes and crimes against humanity and trampling the Constitution. Ex-AG Gonzales lands Texas Tech job
  • Hunters scoured thick forests today searching for a wild elephant that rampaged through villages on both sides of the India-Nepal border, trampling 12 people to death.
  • Even after years of severe dryness, some species can be revived with a little water, which is why they can survive regular tramplings on the city's pavements.
  • It is a good beast for carrying a burden or trampling down a foe, but a very indifferent one at a lavolta or a coranto. Lives of the English Poets
  • He had people trampling on his toes on the way to the ring. The Sun
  • The carport was a big, flat expanse of lawn, a variant of mutant grass, which could take an infinite amount of trampling. A Gift From Earth
  • No trampling of feet, no crushed creases, no sweat and no traffic jams.
  • The seeds would then be sun dried or parched over a slow fire to crack open the hulls to then be threshed by trampling.
  • She had been alerted online to the product by an Indian citizen appalled at the prospect of people trampling over or wiping their feet on the emblem. Times, Sunday Times
  • As a sample of the religious sentiment of Pindar we give the following fragment of a threnos translated by MR. SYMONDS, which, he says, "sounds like a trumpet blast for immortality, and, trampling underfoot the glories of this world, reveals the gladness of the souls that have attained Elysium: Mosaics of Grecian History
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