Use "stoop" in a sentence

1. Don't stoop to her level.

2. He can stoop to fawn.

3. How could anyone stoop so low?

4. I would never stoop to cheating.

5. I won't stoop to argue with him.

6. 2 They stoop and bend down together;

7. I didn't think he'd stoop to cheating.

8. 13 He would never stoop to conciliate.

9. Jarvis stepped out on to the stoop.

10. Bosporanic Absolutely ideal for stickball and stoop ball

11. I don't want you to stoop so low.

12. They should be made to stoop to enter.

13. You surely don't think I'd stoop to that!

14. He tends to stoop because he's so tall.

15. I didn't expect you to stoop to lying.

16. I refuse to stoop to such bullying tactics.

17. They will stoop to every low-down trick.

18. If you do, you stoop to their level.

19. We sat talking on the stoop until midnight.

20. They stood together on the stoop and rang the bell.

21. We had to stoop to pass through the low entrance.

22. He is a tall man with a slight stoop.

23. He would not stoop to do anything dishonorable.sentencedict .com

24. She would have scorned to stoop to such tactics.

25. There's no blood on the front stoop or walk, either.

26. He was a tall, thin fellow with a slight stoop.

27. The doorway was so low that he had to stoop.

28. 3 We had to stoop to pass through the low entrance.

29. I don't believe she would ever stoop to bribery or blackmail.

30. In what sense do Babylon’s gods “stoop over” and “bend down”?

31. You know, on my back stoop, the lot across the street, back yard.

32. At her lowest ebb, she would have scorned to stoop to such tactics.

33. Yet economists now routinely stoop to ad hominem attacks and inflammatory polemics.

34. Tis less discredit to abridge petty charges, than to stoop to petty gettings.

35. The doorway was so low that we had to stoop to go through it.

36. I no longer had to stoop to wash my hands in public restrooms.

37. To stoop, especially with the knees bent: Crouched over the grate, searching for his keys

38. She got home to find the kids sitting on the stoop waiting for her.

39. To stoop, especially with the knees bent: Crouched over the grate, searching for his keys

40. They are ready to say and write contemptible falsities and to stoop to do meanness.”

41. Barnett did not stoop to the kind of chicanery that had made Davis so unpopular.

42. I am shocked that the magazine would stoop to publishing nude pictures of the couple.

43. I could never stoop to such conduct as that;I should consider it beneath me.

44. He is tall and old, with gray hair, and he walks with a slight stoop.’

45. She stood on the stoop , shrunken, gesticulating with thin arms , her loose mouth working angrily.

46. I have had to stoop to pocketing the money the Supporters' Club give for raffle prizes.

47. See synonyms for: Crouch / Crouched / Crouching on Thesaurus.com verb (used without object) to stoop or bend low

48. There were very few functionaries, however mean, who would stoop to inquire into the maintenance of toilets.

49. 5 Barnett did not stoop to the kind of chicanery that had made Davis so unpopular.

50. 30 I sat on our scratchy brick stoop, dangling my legs edge, feeling more rootless felt.

51. He tried to make me accept a bribe I hope I would never stoop so low.

52. I could never stoop to such conduct as that;I should consider it beneath me. Sentencedict.com

53. Wisdom person the body with high - fed stoop, show quite cultured expression, unhurried geographical hauling comes.

54. Something just went down between that ADT they just scooped and that kid on the stoop over there.

55. First, by beating Leicester in today's Pilkington semi-final at the Stoop to qualify for the final again.

56. The national Press must be very short on good news stories to stoop to these levels of reporting.

57. Then footage of police, some in uniform, some not, gathered on the stoop of a row house.

58. Miguel parked the car in front, stashing the briefcase under his seat before joining Domino on the stoop.

59. She may want to argue, but it takes two to tango and I won't stoop to her level.

60. Anyway, he would certainly not discuss the subject with the raffish set who would stoop to street-women.

61. 17 Backache is a constant complaint as I stoop over low baths, sinks, baby buggies and shopping trolleys.

62. One of her crutches falls in front of the man; she has to painfully stoop to recover it.

63. Up Leggett Avenue, he stopped off at Beck, where Domino sat on the stoop of a beaten blue building.

64. She was unwilling to believe anyone would stoop so low as to steal a ring from a dead woman's finger.

65. The students then stoop to sit on their heels and issue another formal bow before standing and beginning the lesson.

66. To stoop low with the knees bent: He Crouched down and began to whisper in his little boy's ear

67. Cower definition: crouch or curl up synonyms: huddle, bow, crouch, stoop antonyms: stretch, extension, straight line, rear, stand, lie

68. He was a tall thin man with a stoop, who was rarely seen without a pipe clenched between his teeth.

69. Some examples of Anaphora: In time the savage bull sustains the yoke, In time all haggard hawks will stoop to lure,

70. (Philippians 4:6-8) Let us act in harmony with Paul’s counsel and never stoop to the level of wicked ones.

71. Maybe not even cynical, maybe just female practicality which can stoop with clearest conscience below the level of the lowest stratagem.

72. When she finally scooted out of the car and up the stoop, he pulled the cross out from under his sweater.

73. (Isaiah 46:2) Babylon’s gods seem to “stoop over” and “bend down” as if wounded in battle or decrepit with age.

74. Frankie dashed into the main kitchen and passed the window in a stoop to avoid being seen by the men outside.

75. Persons of a mature age, who had Bulked large at home, would not stoop to plod through the rudiments of a new profession

76. I never thought I'd see a mayor of this city, even this mayor, stoop so low as to steal the homes of 30,000 hardworking New Yorkers.

77. Crouch Meaning: "to stoop low, lie close to the ground," late 14c., probably from Old French crochir "become bent,… See definitions of Crouch.

78. “General Jackson is extremely tall and thin, with a slight stoop, Betokening more weakness than naturally belongs to his years,” wrote Harriet Martineau, a British social theorist, in her

79. 2 ‘a minor official Condescended to see us’ SYNONYMS deign , stoop, descend, lower oneself, humble oneself, demean oneself, debase oneself, vouchsafe, think fit, see fit, deem it worthy of oneself, consent

80. Deign, see fit, lower yourself, be courteous enough, bend, submit, stoop, unbend (informal), vouchsafe, come down off your high horse (informal), humble or demean yourself He never Condescended to notice me.