Stoop in a sentence as a noun

Thank goodness evil terrorists wouldn't stoop so low as to change the date of birth on their ID...

He chose to stoop to the guys level with name calling and taunting: Welcome to the internet *****?

I just can't cut the customer any slack on stooping to Oceans level, however.

They know they are actually experts, so they don't need to stoop to the level of picking on noobs to make them selves feel like experts.

I stepped out onto my stoop to reassure myself that the gutters were equal to the task of handling that volume of water, which they were.

"But my conscience tells me that I have to tone it down a bit because I'm not a jock, I don't want to stoop down to the same level of those who've bullied me.

Academics snub their noses at 'businesses', that's for slimy 'business people', academics don't stoop to that level.

Stoop in a sentence as a verb

The experience reminded me of one as a child when I unfairly sold some worthless items to neighbors at a stoop sale in front of our house in Brooklyn.

I won't stoop to comparing programming languages to actual American cities, but I would counter that "PHP is like living in [a particular] big city.

He was standing on the stoop, phone in hand, gesticulating wildly at the waterfall and apparently having a loud, boisterous conversation with someone at the other end of the line!

The idea that I would stoop to censorship for something as petty as somebody voicing legitimate complaints about a technical screwup of mine is laughable.

Entrenched in their own way, and I learned that it's a zero sum type game where the one willing to stoop the lowest will win. Going to a few "dealer workshops" I learned psychological tactics to make the customer feel like **** to get them to pay you more money and sign contracts that they would inevitably regret later.

Recent events have shown that every person or organization will stoop as low as they can go to protect self-interest while preaching ethics and accountability to others and expecting them to follow in any condition.

If anything, it should bring up serious doubts about the integrity of a team that, when faced with overwhelming demand and flush with investor cash, stoop to a level of cognitive dissonance necessary to claim lofty goals of fighting hunger worldwide while sidestepping around the rats and filth in their "beta" production environment.

Stoop definitions

noun

an inclination of the top half of the body forward and downward

noun

basin for holy water

See also: stoup

noun

small porch or set of steps at the front entrance of a house

See also: stoep

verb

bend one's back forward from the waist on down; "he crouched down"; "She bowed before the Queen"; "The young man stooped to pick up the girl's purse"

See also: crouch bend

verb

debase oneself morally, act in an undignified, unworthy, or dishonorable way; "I won't stoop to reading other people's mail"

See also: condescend

verb

descend swiftly, as if on prey; "The eagle stooped on the mice in the field"

verb

sag, bend, bend over or down; "the rocks stooped down over the hiking path"

verb

carry oneself, often habitually, with head, shoulders, and upper back bent forward; "The old man was stooping but he could walk around without a cane"