Associations to the word «Stomp»
Noun
- Curb
- Riff
- Rollins
- Accelerator
- Boot
- Harmonica
- Boots
- Grape
- Foot
- Heel
- Kick
- Brake
- Rhythm
- Anthem
- Clap
- Percussion
- Blues
- Dance
- Slade
- Punch
- Beat
- Shit
- Chorus
- Elbow
- Dancing
- Groove
- Elvis
- Guitar
- Chant
- Bug
- Shout
- Mud
- Dancer
- Drum
- Boogie
- Garage
- Homecoming
- Shoe
- Knee
- Melody
- Vocal
- Diving
- Chest
- Pad
- Hoove
- Yr
- Jelly
- Cop
- Cursing
- Sound
- Weasel
- Shuffle
- Zeppelin
- Surfer
- Orton
- Kicking
- Tko
- Ballad
- Morton
- Synth
- Huff
- Hines
- Clinch
- Ska
- Roach
- Grounds
- Strut
- Eq
- Porter
- Toe
- Ogre
- Lula
- Clutch
- Cherokee
- Shouting
Adverb
Wiktionary
STOMP, verb. (ambitransitive) To trample heavily.
STOMP, verb. (transitive) (slang) To severely beat someone physically or figuratively.
STOMP, noun. A dance having a heavy, rhythmic step.
STOMP, noun. The jazz music for this dance.
STOMP OFF, verb. (intransitive) to leave somewhere in an angry mood.
STOMP ON, verb. (transitive) to severely defeat.
STOMP ON, verb. (transitive) to severely mistreat
STOMP OUT, verb. Variant of stamp out.
STOMP OUT, verb. To extinguish something by stomping or stepping forcefully on it; used with intangible objects.
Dictionary definition
STOMP, noun. A dance involving a rhythmical stamping step.
STOMP, verb. Walk heavily; "The men stomped through the snow in their heavy boots".
Wise words
To use the same words is not a sufficient guarantee of
understanding; one must use the same words for the same
genus of inward experience; ultimately one must have one's
experiences in common.