Synonym: rampant), rearing. Similar words: rampage, company, campaign, accompany, companion, pant, keep company with, pants. Meaning: ['ræmpnt] adj. 1. unrestrained and violent 2. rearing on left hind leg with forelegs elevated and head usually in profile 3. (of a plant) having a lush and unchecked growth.
Random good picture Not show
(31) From 1874 upon the sail was emblazoned the rampant white horse of Kent.
(32) Inflation here has been rampant, the charge for admission having increased sixty-fold since I was a lad.
(33) They won three straight, reached their mid-season bye week at 4-4 and flowed with good health and rampant optimism.
(34) The game was hardly artistic, flowing with penalties and turnovers and rampant sloppiness.
(35) The error is rampant in psychology and psychiatry, but not limited to these fields.
(36) What of Isleifr's white bear, uselessly rampant in Goslar, while Isleifr waited in vain for his summons to consecration?
(37) That perspective later reappeared as he witnessed what he considered the rampant missteps of modern allopathic medicine.
(38) In spite of his attributes, he believed that witchcraft was running rampant and appears to have been an anti-Semite.
(39) Mr Izmailov cited pervasive pollution, bad weather, rampant poaching and over-fishing as the reasons for the declining catch.
(40) Frangipani grew wild and rampant up a grey cliff of limestone above the south bank.
(41) But the greed and the amorality ar not as rampant as the public seems to think.
(42) And they had disintegrated in familiar fashion, with careless penalties and rampant ragged play.
(43) Inflation running at 57 %, record unemployment, rampant corruption and real threats to democracy.
(44) There are waterfalls and cascades, cliffs and rocks, native trees and rampant heather in an earthly paradise.
(45) Goons run rampant; crack is dealt on every corner of the Bronx, and law enforcement is something of a joke.
(46) About 30,000 workers died during its construction, either from industrial accidents or from rampant yellow fever and malaria.
(47) In the good old days of rampant dualism, the mind was rarely mentioned in polite society.
(48) Fat women are defined as undesirable, asexual, maternal, sexually desperate, rampant or repressed.
(49) This is now part of the Roman Catholic rite, which has never had problems of rampant tuberculosis because of the cup.
(49) Wish you can benefit from our online sentence dictionary and make progress day by day!
(50) Some of his friends remembered him saying he had been stalked by militia members, and for a while speculation ran rampant.
(51) A political novice comes to town, preaching change and rampant wealth by tax cut.
(52) A GALLUP poll on meat-eating habits claims to show that vegetarianism is rampant and on the increase.
(53) Her first glimpse of it was through elaborate iron gates set between two large stone pillars surmounted by rampant lions.
(54) A rich soil soon becomes home to rampant weeds which smother less competitive, more attractive plants.
(55) United's leading scorer was in rampant mood and was twice kept out by superb saves from Gould.
(56) True, Newt Gingrich will pay $ 300, 000 to reinforce this image of fund raising run rampant.
(57) To some one like Davidson, the Southern Baptist resolution would be ample evidence that abuse is still rampant today.
(58) Bloodletting is popular among the doctors and apothecaries, but herbal medicine, witchcraft and spells are rampant in the general population.
(59) Poverty was not only rampant in the country villages, though, as we know only too well.
(60) Bull fighting suggests itself as one immediately, but it is hardly rampant in Britain.