- verbtrample (verb) · tramples (third person present) · trampled (past tense) · trampled (past participle) · trampling (present participle)
- tread on and crush:"the fence had been trampled down" · "her dog trampled on his tulips"
- (trample on/over)treat with contempt:"a drug-testing device that doesn't trample on employees' civil liberties"
nounliterarytrample (noun) · tramples (plural noun)- an act or the sound of trampling:"destruction's trample treads them down"
Originlate Middle English (in the sense ‘tread heavily’): frequentative of tramp.Similar and Opposite Wordsverb
Bokep
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- To step heavily on something or someoneTrample is a verb that means to step heavily on something or someone, causing damage or injury123. It can also mean to act without any respect for someone or something, as if treading roughly413. Trample is usually followed by on, upon, or over to indicate what or whom is being trampled4123. For example, to trample on a flower bed, to trample on another's feelings, or to trample over the law.Learn more:✕This summary was generated using AI based on multiple online sources. To view the original source information, use the "Learn more" links.verb (used without object),tram·pled,tram·pling. to tread or step heavily and noisily; stamp. to tread heavily, roughly, or crushingly (usually followed by on, upon,or over): to trample on a flower bed. to act in a harsh, domineering, or cruel manner, as if treading roughly (usually followed by on, upon,or over): to trample on another's feelings.www.dictionary.com/browse/trampletrample verb [I or T, usually + prep] (STEP HEAVILY ON) to step heavily on something or someone, causing damage or injury: Somebody trampled all over my flowerbeds! Eight people were trampled to death (= killed) when the stadium collapsed and the crowd rushed out onto the football pitch.dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/trampling: to tramp or tread heavily so as to bruise, crush, or injure cattle trampled on the young wheat b : to crush, injure, or destroy by or as if by treading trampled the flowerswww.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/trampletrample verb [I or T, usually + prep] (TREAT WITHOUT RESPECT) to act without any respect for someone or something: She accused the government of trampling on the needs and rights of the ordinary citizen. He argues that Congress trampled the constitutional rights of legal immigrants in the new welfare reform law.dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/tram…
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Dems trampled the Constitution, warped criminal justice system …
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