to trample (transitive) to disregard, to violate (e.g. rules, laws, agreements) Synonyms: zdeptać, naruszyć (reflexive with się) to trample oneself, to...
fouller (“to trample, mill, fordo, mistreat”), from Old French foler (“to crush, act wickedly”), from Vulgar Latin *fullāre (“to trample, to full”), from...
deranged, gluttonous feeling, a perverse glee in seeing so many dreams trampled on by a massive cultural juggernaut. (performance art) A performance art...
London: […] Dorman Newman […]; and Benjamin Alsop […], →OCLC: When Manſoul trampled upon things Divine, / And wallowed in filth as doth a ſwine: To move lazily...
zoi2 god3 Sinological IPA (key): /jɐm²² jɐn²¹ t͡sɔːi̯³⁵ kɔːt̚³/ 任人宰割 to be at the mercy of others; cannot but allow oneself to be trampled on by others...
Rhymes: -esta, -ɛsta Hyphenation: pé‧sta, pè‧sta Deverbal from pestare (“to trample”) + -a. pesta f (plural peste) (usually in the plural) footprint Synonyms:...
back-formation of Old French ramper, from Frankish *rampōn, *hrampōn (“to contract oneself”), from Proto-Germanic *hrimpaną. Akin to Old English hrimpan (“to wrinkle...
Sawbridge, […], →OCLC: men slaine, then without any spare at all they trampled over the dead carkasses Parsimony; frugal use. 1590, Edmund Spenser, “Book...
with spirit/feeling/zeal/gusto плева́ть в ду́шу ― plevátʹ v dúšu ― to trample on smb.'s feelings (literally, “spit on the soul”) береди́ть ду́шу ― beredítʹ...
flour from the kitchen had been thrown at the looking-glass and lay like trampled snow over the remains of a decent blue suit with the lining ripped out...