28 examples of rampages in sentences

" "As safe as any man himself, young woman, with pistols under his head that he would never dare to fire if robbers were no more than cats rampaging," added Mrs. SKAMMERHORN, enthusiastically.

Of course we refer to phrenological bumps, from which, possibly, the powerful adjective "bumptious" is derived, it being applicable to a person whose conflicting bumps keep him continually on the rampage.

The regular keeper of Bolivar heard he was on the rampage, and he came back on the run to conquer him, after pa had got him back in the tent, but Bolivar looked at him with a faraway look in his eyes, as much as to say: "Seems to me I have met you somewhere before, but a new king has been crowned," and he took his old keeper by the back of his coat and threw him toward the monkey cage.

"If this yere deadly disease is on the rampage I, for one, 'd like to know it.

A BEAR ON THE RAMPAGE XXVI.

CHAPTER XXV A BEAR ON THE RAMPAGE "Hoop-la!" All a-spangle, to the blare of quick music, the great tent ablaze with light, the rows of benches crush-crowded with excited humanity, Andy Wildwood left the spring-board.

"The old man," remarked that officer, a typical, stolid, faithful detective sergeant, "is out on the rampage.

"There will be a sham Dawson in the office and the genuine article will be out on the rampage.

It was rather an indication of honest fanaticism than of deliberate reasoningrather a sign of being solemnly "on the rampage" than of giving way to careful convictionand more symptomatic of a sharp virtuous rant, got up in a crack and to be played out in five minutes, than of a judicious move in the direction of permanent good.

Let it be said that a tiger or a lion is loose, and it causes greater fear, even, than when it is stated that an elephant is on a rampage.

[Footnote 5: In Scotch, remishthe noise of confused and varied movements; a row; a rampage.

Tom, her eldest, the thin, spectacled lawyer, had, as a boy of seven, rampaged on that identical Turkey hearthrug, when it was new, a quarter of a century earlier.

V. be violent &c adj.; run high; ferment, effervesce; romp, rampage, go on a rampage; run wild, run amuck, run riot; break the peace; rush, tear; rush headlong, rush foremost; raise a storm, make a riot; rough house

V. be violent &c adj.; run high; ferment, effervesce; romp, rampage, go on a rampage; run wild, run amuck, run riot; break the peace; rush, tear; rush headlong, rush foremost; raise a storm, make a riot; rough house

This was to go to the flooded Mississippi Valley, and get moving pictures of the "Father of Waters" on one of "his" annual rampages.

On the Rampage.

The fellows lined the road with their gay array, asleep, on the rampage, on the lounge, and nibbling at their rations.

"She sot down," said Joe, "and she got up, and she made a grab at Tickler, and she rampaged out.

These Southerners have voices of such rock-splitting power that, when twenty or thirty of them, inspired by Bacchus, or excited by discussion, shout together, one asks if it would be possible for devils on the rampage to raise a more hideous tumult.

Behind the Antwerp fortifications the Belgian sappers and miners were on an organized rampage of destruction.

She'll rampage at the front door, and 'll despise any escaping like.' That was the gardener's idea, and the gardener had long known the young lady.

"Whatever can she want out there?" thought Sahwah, with visions of Kaiser Bill loose and on a rampage.

I am not now so young as once I was, I have arrived at the Golosh and Gamp Age, I am not equal to contendthat's poz With the Parochial Fathers on the rampage.

It would make quite a story if Miss Althea Beekman got on the rampage.

The bay stallion was on the rampage.

28 examples of  rampages  in sentences