Stomp in a sentence as a noun

Can't we just stomp this one out for good?I really miss noms de guerre.

But the graceful thing to do when you're right is not to curb-stomp those who were wrong.

You might argue that it's fair use, but that doesn't mean **** when WB decides to stomp on you.

I just still can't believe airbnb didnt see this coming, and stomp on the problem as hard as they can to get EJ on their side.

Not once in that demo video did I see the usability monster leap out and try to stomp on anyone's balls.

You are trying to stomp on someone's fond memory of a simple problem that they solved in a way that was novel to them.

Stomp in a sentence as a verb

A timestamp ensures that different team members making migrations at the same time don't stomp on each other's version numbers and cause merge conflicts.

"Ignore for a second that MonoDevelop and Visual Studio will fight over the formatting of those files, stomp on each other changes, and add garbage thats meaningless to the other.

To quote my amazing advisor from his response to my "I'm leaving" email:'We had a Head of Department at Lancaster who used to stomp around the corridors moaning - "I've just lost another student to industry.

The reality is more and more services will switch to the 'client-side-encrypted' model and then you're left trying to stomp out easily replicated and anonymously sharable lists of pointers to legally stored encrypted blobs.

> Why is it that every time some group of people are having fun, we need to stomp on their sandcastle and call them names?Because, obviously, all social interactions that existed 10 years ago were perfectly natural and acceptable, but new types of social interactions that the youngsters are using are evil and bad and evidence of the speedy decline of civilization.

Stomp definitions

noun

a dance involving a rhythmical stamping step

verb

walk heavily; "The men stomped through the snow in their heavy boots"

See also: stamp stump