Stampede in a sentence as a noun

The main problem is when you're going bear hunting and they bring back a stampede of wolves.

I can already feel the ground rumbling with the coming stampede of "X... but with teh drones!

Well, they might want to put a stop to it before there's a fire or stampede in a tight space with no exits.

Kind of how your first amendment rights stop at shouting "Fire" in a crowded theater and causing a stampede

This is slightly off-kilter, but,Can anyone who was there verify the "stampede" or "mayhem"?

When Wal-Mart comes to a town, the stampede away from the old shopping areas to the new Wal-Mart is alarmingly clear.

There's no way to avoid the issue that getting the crowd to stampede means certain targets of opportunity will be very busy.

Stampede in a sentence as a verb

Behold the stampede of engineers running away from the "conservative" label!

Confirmed reports of many in critical condition after today's stampede though.

Nokia's handsets all use recent Qualcomm chipsets, so I would not be surprised if they demo'ed the whole product line running Android just to stampede Microsoft into this deal.

"Our government has kept us in a perpetual state of fear kept us in a continuous stampede of patriotic fervor with the cry of grave national emergency.

Would you want a billion new users all slamming your brand new codebase and infrastructure all at the exact same time?Sure Google can handle scale better than anyone, but a stampede is still a stampede.

Admittedly a more complicated topology but it would circumvent the stampede's against a master instance and also makes it easier to spin up larger numbers of slaves without wiping out the entire platform.

Stampede definitions

noun

a headlong rush of people on a common impulse; "when he shouted `fire' there was a stampede to the exits"

noun

a wild headlong rush of frightened animals (horses or cattle)

verb

cause to run in panic; "Thunderbolts can stampede animals"

verb

cause a group or mass of people to act on an impulse or hurriedly and impulsively; "The tavern owners stampeded us into overeating"

verb

act, usually en masse, hurriedly or on an impulse; "Companies will now stampede to release their latest software"

verb

run away in a stampede