Rally in a sentence as a noun

Think of any time you've written an event loop or had to rally multiple threads.

A note to say that the Stop Watching Us coalition rally is now just two days away.

They did whatever they could think of to do."Very much hoping the community will rally around and join us in this.

Every time an rms article comes up trolls come out of the woodwork to rally about what a kook he is and all "the horrible things" he's done.

This is a ridiculous argument intended to rally support of stoners against I-502.

The mainstream media, and indeed the country, needed some symbol to rally around and the Patriot Missile became that symbol.

Rally in a sentence as a verb

This is a gripping account of what these surveillance programs lead to written by someone who saw when they go wrong:I live in a country generally assumed to be a dictatorship.

And yet the people will not apply the same indefensible yardstick to the FBI improperly investigating his mother, and instead will rally round the FBI as upstanding people just trying to do a tough job.

Always there has been some terrible evil at home or some monstrous foreign power that was going to gobble us up if we did not blindly rally behind it by furnishing the exorbitant funds demanded.

It's why communities rally around protesting against sex offender treatment centres or cheer about prison rape like more sexual abuse somehow won't make offenders more deviant.

> A distribution built by GNU hackers is a great opportunity to improve consistency and cohesion in GNU!Because the existing fragmentation of GNU package management is too confusing, so we need a new standard for everyone to rally round.

Ageism is dumb, and I rally against it now as an adult as much as I did when I was 15.> "but I seriously haven't really heard someone over the age of 30 or so make snarky remarks about how so-and-so is such a hipster douchebag"Maybe that's because you surround yourself with people who have similar outlooks?

Rally definitions

noun

a large gathering of people intended to arouse enthusiasm

noun

the feat of mustering strength for a renewed effort; "he singled to start a rally in the 9th inning"; "he feared the rallying of their troops for a counterattack"

See also: rallying

noun

a marked recovery of strength or spirits during an illness

noun

an automobile race run over public roads

noun

(sports) an unbroken sequence of several successive strokes; "after a short rally Connors won the point"

See also: exchange

verb

gather; "drum up support"

verb

call to arms; of military personnel

See also: mobilize mobilise

verb

gather or bring together; "muster the courage to do something"; "she rallied her intellect"; "Summon all your courage"

See also: muster summon

verb

return to a former condition; "The jilted lover soon rallied and found new friends"; "The stock market rallied"

See also: rebound

verb

harass with persistent criticism or carping; "The children teased the new teacher"; "Don't ride me so hard over my failure"; "His fellow workers razzed him when he wore a jacket and tie"