Barricade in a sentence as a noun

He smashed through a police barricade and then plowed down people, some of them lined up outside a nightclub, over a span of two blocks.

"I'm getting confused here, since English is not my native language -- but how's Eich a bigot, and the other side of the barricade not?

I remember one night after I lost a tooth where I tried to barricade my bedroom door in order to test if the tooth fairy was real.

Countries will feel free to barricade "their internet" and control communications.

Central bank as lenders of last reserve barricade against liquidity panics.

Why not have a plastic flap hang down and thwack the top of the too-tall truck?Next, if that's ignored, a plywood barricade hanging down: Better some splintered plywood than a jammed tunnel.

Barricade in a sentence as a verb

"Your statement that PUC 7908 prohibits interruption only in hostage or barricade situations is incorrect; those are referred to in PUC 7907, which discusses cutting phone lines.

The cockpit door is rarely open during flight, and when the cockpit door needs to open, the flight attendants barricade the front of the plane using the food service carts locked diagonally across the isle.

It's only acceptable to file retroactively in cases where there is an imminent risk of death or great bodily harm, such as a hostage or barricade situation or other 'extreme emergency situation.

I'm guessing you didn't drive on dirt roads or carry all of the fuel for the trip with you in jugs, all while hoping you had enough bribe money for anyone who might turn up with a rusty AK-47 and a barricade to keep them from taking said computer from you along the way.

Who do you think should fix it if not the MIT students?Why don't they go and physically remove administration from the MIT and never let it back?It seems impossibly unlawful when I write this but you know, there were times when students had a political agendas and they used to run over campuses, barricade them and battle the police.

Barricade definitions

noun

a barrier set up by police to stop traffic on a street or road in order to catch a fugitive or inspect traffic etc.

See also: roadblock

noun

a barrier (usually thrown up hastily) to impede the advance of an enemy; "they stormed the barricade"

verb

render unsuitable for passage; "block the way"; "barricade the streets"; "stop the busy road"

See also: block blockade stop

verb

prevent access to by barricading; "The street where the President lives is always barricaded"

verb

block off with barricades

See also: barricado