Troop in a sentence as a noun

Tell the local boy scout troop you'll make them a web site.

I'm an atheist myself, as were many in my troop.

They could show moving imagery of troop movements on the Crimea right now?

D'you know what that little girl of mine did last Saturday, when her troop was on a hike out Berkhamsted way?

With just a bunch of people cooperating one could pretty much map out all the troop movement throughout the city.

Sponsor the your employee's kid's boy scout troop or let your employees use the office for gaming after hours.

We got through one "year" a week, with Spring and Autumn troop movements due by the end of the day on Tuesday and Thursday respectively.

The commander in charge of the local troop deployment interrogated him and decided that he wasn't a threat to the state.

Troop in a sentence as a verb

When a troop of rampaging soldiers cuts through your village and pillages everything in sight, you grab your cows and family and boogey out of there.

Wikimedia Foundation really needs to rein in its own troop of button-pushing yard-apes before lawyers get involved.

It's doubtless that it's a vital part of being a member of any small troop of chimpanzees, keeping track of complicated relationships, who owes who what, who's allied with who, who's sleeping with who, etc.

The surveillance service began their history by monitoring enemy armies, knowing what the troop movements were and locating potential weaknesses.

As you get more involved, you start joining committees, planning events, coaching teams, going on retreats, leading the local Boy Scout troop, participating in Bible studies, etc and are able to bond with adults there.

Its been shown, for example, that troops at the time of the revolutionary war that fired on each other by and large missed - troops would load gunpowder but not the bullet; they would aim over the heads of the opposing troop at the last second; and so on.

In the very country being accused of civil rights violations by the defendant?And besides troop movements, names and locations of undercover operatives, and other specific information that could get people hurt or killed, why should the government keep secrets from its citizens for any reason?

Troop definitions

noun

a group of soldiers

noun

a cavalry unit corresponding to an infantry company

noun

a unit of Girl or Boy Scouts

noun

an orderly crowd; "a troop of children"

See also: flock

verb

march in a procession; "the veterans paraded down the street"

See also: parade promenade

verb

move or march as if in a crowd; "They children trooped into the room"