stomp

listen to the pronunciation of stomp
English - English
The jazz music for this dance
To severely beat someone physically or figuratively
To trample heavily
A dance having a heavy, rhythmic step
{v} to beat with the foor
{n} a beat or hard step of the foot
walk heavily; "The men stomped through the snow in their heavy boots"
To stamp with the foot
to trample heavily on something or someone
a dance involving a rhythmical stamping step walk heavily; "The men stomped through the snow in their heavy boots
{i} style of jazz dance characterized by a rhythmic stamping of the feet; music that accompanies a stomp dance
If you stomp somewhere, you walk there with very heavy steps, often because you are angry. He stomped out of the room. to walk with heavy steps or to put your foot down very hard, especially because you are angry = stamp (stamp)
a dance involving a rhythmical stamping step
{f} stamp, trample, tread heavily
curb stomp
To stomp on someone's head, forcing it into a street curb - often while they are positioned with their teeth biting the curb
curb stomp
An act of curb stomping
stomping
Present participle of stomp
stomping
In a way that stomps or suggests stomping; stompy
stomped
past of stomp
stomper
{i} one who dances the stomp; one who treads heavily, one who tramples
stomper
one who stomps
stomping
Exercise done in a cow yard
stomping
Pokémon with powerful legs that can stomp and trample
stomps
third-person singular of stomp
stomps
plural of stomp
stomp

    Turkish pronunciation

    stämp

    Pronunciation

    /ˈstämp/ /ˈstɑːmp/

    Etymology

    [ 'stämp, 'stomp ] (verb.) 1803. 1803, variant of stamp. Compare Swedish stampa (“to stomp”). More at stamp.

    Common Collocations

    stomp out, stomp off

    Videos

    ... ( crowd chanting ) NAKAMURA STOMP! NAKAMURA STOMP! ...
    ... - YEAH! - NAKAMURA STOMP! ...
Favorites