pummelled in English

verb
1
strike repeatedly, typically with the fists.
Bob did not fight back for the fifteen minutes that the half-dozen men pummeled him
synonyms:batterpoundbelabordrubbeatpunchstrikehitthumpthrashcold-cockclobberwallopbashwhackbeat the living daylights out ofgive someone a (good) hidingbeltlay intolambustslugsmite
verb

Use "pummelled" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "pummelled" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "pummelled", or refer to the context using the word "pummelled" in the English Dictionary.

1. The cook pummelled at the dough.

2. 11 He pummelled the pillow with his fists.

3. The child pummelled his mother angrily as she carried him home.

4. 11 The boxer had pummelled his opponent into submission by the end of the fourth round.

5. Synonyms for Belabour include beat, hit, batter, strike, pound, thrash, deck, buffet, clobber and pummelled

6. 4 The boxer had pummelled his opponent into submission by the end of the fourth round.

7. The boxer had pummelled his opponent into submission by the end of the fourth round.

8. 9 The boxer had pummelled his opponent into submission by the end of the fourth round.

9. Then she pummelled Clare's pillow and kicked clumsily against the nearest wall with her booted feet.

10. The tale is Bookended by battles – faces meatily pummelled, bones crunchily broken and throats spurtingly sliced as offstage conflicts are placed centre-screen

11. Today, Beersheba is a modern university town of some 200,000 people, at 25 miles from the Gaza strip further than either Sderot or Netivot, though still within range of incoming grad rockets that have at times pummelled the city.

12. ‘In reality, it is a Bludgeon used by businesses against their better-performing competitors.’ ‘Another small sound and the guard was on its feet with a Bludgeon in its hand.’ ‘It acts on one like a Bludgeon until one's sensibility is pummelled flat and one's heart goes dead.’