Throng in a sentence as a noun

He saw someone stand and speak briefly, then heard the throng roar its approval.

May there be a throng of distraught weeping bankers and insurers at your funeral, sir.

I can throng lay recommend to everyone o read Sandor Katz's "Art of Fermentation".

Cash-strapped municipalities cannot compete and people throng to these places.

Aaaand, cue the throng of straight, white, upper middle class males, who'll post a hundred aggressive comments like "stop being oversensitive".

Even on Tinder, there's like this subtle charade that yeah, we're both normally way too cool for this stuff but our throng of friends finally convinced us to join.

" "Well, I guess I could start working on some projects that have been on my mind while I keep hunting high and low..."After a long throng of this, I eventually concluded that I would:1.

Throng in a sentence as a verb

[1] I am always amazed at the throng of traffic every morning, city folk commuting to the suburbs and suburban folk commuting to the city.

There is a reason, you see, why people throng the higher education today, and why the education's gatekeepers confidently tax them for the way in.

"a throng of Java graduates who think they're changing the world by continually dumping **** specs over the wall and paying for subsidized articles to promote them.

Not a throng of Java graduates who think they're changing the world by continually dumping **** specs over the wall and paying for subsidized articles to promote them.

In the above link, do we necessarily have to understand every nuance of the society before we say killing someone to a cheering throng of people without a trial on hearsay of adultery is "wrong"?

Seems like a good encoding of what we are: a babbling throng of socially connected low-level cognition nodes, occasionally galvanized or sent off in some direction by a smaller set of higher cognition control nodes.

Throng definitions

noun

a large gathering of people

See also: multitude concourse

verb

press tightly together or cram; "The crowd packed the auditorium"

See also: pack pile