Mound in a sentence as a noun

Dig a deep hole, or make a mound, then you can grow your weed with good privacy.

It has been shown that a higher pitcher's mound favors the pitcher.

There's no point in creatively discussing a mound of ****.

It's the same with every kind of book: a few gems hidden in a mound of trash.

That's why every time I see a fire ant mound I pour rubbing alcohol down it.

A lower mound would shift the balance a bit to the batter, leading to more hits, and thus a more exciting game.

Our "fighting" them would be akin to termites "fighting" a steamroller flattening their mound.

Usually it's something ancient, like a viking burial mound or an old fortress.

Mound in a sentence as a verb

The solution is to lower the pitcher's mound... this is a variable that has been tweaked a number of times in baseball already!

I confess this is an Ad Hominem Circumstantial, but what would you say if you and your channel partners were sitting on a mound of unsold inventory?

Part of me is rather skeptical that the giant mound of assumptions about hardware, software, and physics backing this discovery is correct.

"Whereas Stonehenge was orientated towards the sun, the more then 100 meter width burial mound of Magdalenenberg was focused towards the moon.

In 2005, a research team led by Chinese archaeologist Duan Chingbo took 4,000 samples from the earthen mound to test for Mercury, and all of the samples came back highly positive.

Google is a mound of computational power and data with no remaining hold on human morality or ethics -- anything we can retrieve from there is salvage.

So the only time I would berate a pitcher or get on a pitcher would be when I felt like they were pitching scared on the mound and that they were trying to avoid contact because they were afraid of what was going to happen.

I don't think there are many 4-way stops in the US that cannot be replaced by a mini-roundabout for reasons of space or cost; mini-roundabouts are just solid white circles of paint on the ground, with a more or less pronounced mound.

Mound definitions

noun

(baseball) the slight elevation on which the pitcher stands

See also: hill

noun

a small natural hill

See also: knoll hillock hummock hammock

noun

a collection of objects laid on top of each other

See also: pile heap agglomerate cumulation cumulus

noun

structure consisting of an artificial heap or bank usually of earth or stones; "they built small mounds to hide behind"

See also: hill

noun

the position on a baseball team of the player who throws the ball for a batter to try to hit; "he has played every position except pitcher"; "they have a southpaw on the mound"

See also: pitcher

verb

form into a rounded elevation; "mound earth"