Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    stampede
    /stamˈpiːd/

    noun

    • 1. a sudden panicked rush of a number of horses, cattle, or other animals: "the herd was fleeing back to the high land in a wild stampede"

    verb

    • 1. (of horses, cattle, or other animals) rush wildly in a sudden mass panic: "the nearby sheep stampeded as if they sensed impending danger"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. an occasion when many large animals or many people suddenly all move quickly and in an uncontrolled way, usually in the same direction at the same time, especially because of fear: Two shoppers were injured in the stampede as shop doors opened on the first day of the sale. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  3. The meaning of STAMPEDE is a wild headlong rush or flight of frightened animals. How to use stampede in a sentence. a wild headlong rush or flight of frightened animals; a mass movement of people at a common impulse…

  4. Stampede definition: a sudden, frenzied rush or headlong flight of a herd of frightened animals, especially cattle or horses.. See examples of STAMPEDE used in a sentence.

  5. an occasion when many large animals or many people suddenly all move quickly and in an uncontrolled way, usually in the same direction at the same time, especially because of fear: Two shoppers were injured in the stampede as shop doors opened on the first day of the sale. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  6. A sudden frenzied rush of panic-stricken animals. 2. A sudden headlong rush or flight of a crowd of people. 3. A mass impulsive action: a stampede of support for the candidate. v. stam·ped·ed, stam·ped·ing, stam·pedes. v.tr. 1. To cause (a herd of animals) to flee in panic.

  7. If there is a stampede, a group of people or animals run in a wild, uncontrolled way. There was a stampede for the exit. American English : stampede / stæmˈpid /

  8. a situation in which a group of people or large animals such as horses suddenly start running in the same direction, especially because they are frightened or excited. A stampede broke out when the doors opened.