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18 Sentences With "pounded down"

How to use pounded down in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "pounded down" and check conjugation/comparative form for "pounded down". Mastering all the usages of "pounded down" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The fans saw running forehands whipped back across court and pounded down the line.
Instead the stuff is simply shovelled off the back of a lorry and pounded down.
It can replace polyurethane products like makeup sponges or be pounded down to create a leatherlike textile.
And no one wants to be licked by a dog who just pounded down a steaming pile of crap.
He pounded down 26 aces and saved all three break points he faced en route to his first career victory.
"We will be told by 100 company directors that we should stay in," said Lovett, as he pounded down another side street.
The emergency medical crew took me outside where rain pounded down on Eighth Avenue and felt surprisingly refreshing, a reprieve from my hot flashes and sweats.
THE ERA The film opened in the midst of the Great Depression, and Kong could be taken as a metaphor for Americans' lives in disarray, their dreams pounded down.
"I felt very clear in what I needed to do and I believed that I could do it," Raonic, who pounded down 24 aces and hit 82 clean winners, told reporters.
Donovan Sung, Xiaomi's Director of Product Management and Marketing, explained to me during a briefing how over 200,400 tons of pressure is applied to ceramic in its raw, mushy, pounded down state.
Osaka's victory in front of an expectant home crowd was her 10th in a row and did not look in doubt from the moment the world number seven pounded down a huge ace with her first serve of the match.
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - In-form Canadian Milos Raonic pounded down 235 aces and 55 winners to overcome Croatian Marin Cilic 6-4 6-3 7-20153 on Sunday and become the first man to reach the quarter-finals of the Australian Open.
Dada from 2013-2015 only to have their hard-earned record pounded down at an event hosted by the My Pillow company and actor Steve Baldwin, where 6,251 people gathered at St. Paul's CHS baseball field to amicably beat the bejesus out of each other.
A nail house is a Chinese neologism for homes belonging to people (sometimes called "stubborn nails") who refuse to make room for real estate development. The term, a pun coined by developers, refers to nails that are stuck in wood, and cannot be pounded down with a hammer.
The serpentine dipped backward, toward the firer, to ignite the priming. This is the reverse of the familiar forward-dipping hammer of the flintlock and later firearms. A later addition to the gun was the rifled barrel. This made the gun much more accurate at longer distances but did have drawbacks, the main one being that it took much longer to reload because the bullet had to be pounded down into the barrel.
The Ainu legend goes that at the beginning of the world, there was only water and earth mixed together in a sludge. Nothing existed except for the thunder demons in the clouds and the first self created kamuy. The first kamuy then sent down a bird spirit, moshiri-kor-kamuy, to make the world inhabitable. The water wagtail bird saw the swampy state of the earth and flew over the waters, and pounded down the earth with its feet and tail.
The Coyote then attempts to load a cannon, but as he pounds in the cannonball with a stick, the cannon fires the two items out of it, with the Coyote still hanging on to the stick. Gravity results, and Wile E. and the stick land into the ground, to be pounded down by the cannonball. 6\. Wile E. now lies in wait on top of a cliff with another, but much larger cannon as the Road Runner munches on more birdseed. The Coyote turns the cannon downwards as he goes to light the fuse, but the cannon falls off its mount, taking the Coyote down with it.
Culturally, the adage contrasts with that of the Japanese proverb, "The stake that sticks up gets hammered down", or "The nail that stands out gets pounded down," (出る釘は打たれる, deru kugi wa utareru), or the Dutch proverbs "Tall trees catch loads of wind" ("Hoge bomen vangen veel wind", implying they're the first to go down) and "[The wheat that's growing] above the mowing line [gets cut down]" ("[Koren dat] boven het maaiveld uitsteekt [wordt afgehakt]"). Similarly, one of the Chinese proverbs goes "会哭的孩子有奶吃", which means "The crying baby gets the milk" and Korean one "모난 돌이 정 맞는다: Pointy stone meets chisel." while German and Spanish proverbs go "Das Rad, das am lautesten quietscht, bekommt das meiste Fett: The wheel that squeaks the loudest gets most of the grease." and "El que no llora no mama: He who does not cry does not suck." However, a sentiment similar to the Japanese focus on modesty and humility is also reflected in the idea of tall poppy syndrome, which is popular in commonwealth countries, and the Law of Jante in Scandinavia.

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