Wallop in a sentence as a noun

It packs a wallop and it's... pretty damn convincing.

They all deserve a mighty wallop upside the head.

You don't want to wallop an entire industry but at some point it kind of has to happen.

HP and DEC both had a strong and much-admired culture and way of doing business and then wallop.

He has also thumped his chest about how Microsoft is going to wallop the competition in those spaces.

What other baggage have you carried all your life and used to wallop people over the head with?This "you owe me an apology" trend is wild.

Not only did he not wallop other companies, but while trying to do so, he destroyed good products and hurt Microsoft in its strong markets.

Wallop in a sentence as a verb

That's because, should they do so, the UPS driver is just likely to wallop the snot out of them, and if not that then almost certain to call the local constabulary.

"What about a comparison to other Teslas with smaller batteries --like the model 3 with its 75kWh battery-- which still manage to wallop the e-tron's range?

One article from 2015 says "WrestleMania — the Super Bowl of pro wrestling — is coming to Arlington’s AT&T Stadium in April, and it could pack a financial wallop for local businesses.

And this is a bad thing?>What about a comparison to other Teslas with smaller batteries --like the model 3 with its 75kWh battery-- which still manage to wallop the e-tron's range?Would you ask BMW why they aren't comparing a 750il to an Audi A3?

> Not every sleeper is the same, of course: Dinges has found that some people who need eight hours will immediately feel the wallop of one four-hour night, while other eight-hour sleepers can handle several four-hour nights before their performance deteriorates.

Because the Economist's point is that so much of the potential tax revenue is getting excluded due to loopholes that eliminating those loopholes without reducing the marginal tax rate at the same time would amount to an enormous wallop.

Wallop definitions

noun

a forceful consequence; a strong effect; "the book had an important impact on my thinking"; "the book packs a wallop"

See also: impact

noun

a severe blow

verb

hit hard; "The teacher whacked the boy"

See also: whack wham whop

verb

defeat soundly and utterly; "We'll wallop them!"