Swamp in a sentence as a noun

If it's not the True North, what does it matter if you fell in a swamp?

What's the use of knowing True North?\n\nYou just screwed up with your tactics and fell into a swamp.

But Netflix doesn't send that traffic for fun and giggles, just to swamp your network and clog up the port.

This thread is mostly an uninformed fever swamp.

Prior to that the area was a malarial swamp that was not of much interest to people.

I'd rather I it didn't auto-play and let me choose whether I want a page to swamp my bandwidth and CPU.

But that is the dark side of being an engineer - the work and the creative aspects can swamp everything else.

But it also implies that you can be anyone or anything and be found, in the vast swamp of the internet.

Swamp in a sentence as a verb

In the sub-45 year old population that would absolutely swamp every other cause of death.

If in pursuit of your destination, you plunge\n ahead, heedless of obstacles, and achieve nothing more than to\n sink in a swamp...

It does rather swamp other contributions while being somewhat generic.

There are a few beacons of light in the giant swamp that is Amazon, but IMO there are very few redeeming corners of the company.

Interestingly enough, this also led the Venetians to focus a bit more on their land conquests in northern Italy, so there are some areas that received more attention at that point: swamps drained, villas built, and so on, which made sense, with trade drying up. My wife comes from a town that really came into being in the 1600's, which, for Italy, is fairly late, all things considered.

But pretty much everyone I know who has used markdown has wandered into the swamp that is known as 'tables of despair'.Michael Fortin's syntax is pretty useful and quite close to the spirit of Gruber's original efforts.

In most of my Civ II games, I produce hordes of engineers, which I use to terraform the **** out of the planet--getting railroads everywhere, irrigation and farmland on all plains and grassland, mining on all hills, turning mountains into hills and swamp and jungle into forest, and eventually turning plains and forest into grassland and hills.

Swamp definitions

noun

low land that is seasonally flooded; has more woody plants than a marsh and better drainage than a bog

See also: swampland

noun

a situation fraught with difficulties and imponderables; "he was trapped in a medical swamp"

verb

drench or submerge or be drenched or submerged; "The tsunami swamped every boat in the harbor"

See also: drench

verb

fill quickly beyond capacity; as with a liquid; "the basement was inundated after the storm"; "The images flooded his mind"

See also: deluge flood inundate