chest-thumping

Examples Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of chest-thumping Harris’ fortunes improved dramatically following Trump’s six-hour rally at Madison Square Garden, a chest-thumping extravaganza that the bettors reckoned would antagonize female voters on the fence. Chris Morris, Fortune, 5 Nov. 2024 Matthew Rhys, in his brief moments, gives George Carlin a chest-thumping, confrontational machismo. Bilge Ebiri, Vulture, 27 Sep. 2024 An eighth-inning throwing error from right-hander Blake Treinen allowed the Diamondbacks to tie the score and former Dodger Joc Pederson hit a chest-thumping home run in the ninth to give Arizona a 5-4 lead. Doug Padilla, Orange County Register, 2 July 2024 Asian countries sometimes recoil at the American tendency to frame its support for democracy in chest-thumping, even messianic terms. Michael Green, Foreign Affairs, 23 Jan. 2024 Located beneath a tangle of freeway overpasses, the park reverberated with chest-thumping music and speeches amplified extra loud to drown out the roar of overhead traffic. Phil Diehl, San Diego Union-Tribune, 21 Apr. 2024 The chest-thumping challenges from both men appeared to speak to a new form of macho aggression in a culture more associated with cutthroat industry practices than hand-to-hand violence. Miles Klee, Rolling Stone, 21 July 2023
Recent Examples of Synonyms for chest-thumping
Noun
  • Dastmalchian gets to play it all — disbelief, arrogance, grieving, terrified — sometimes in the same moment.
    Jenelle Riley, Variety, 31 Oct. 2024
  • These things are a big investment of time and to have not one, but two of them that might otherwise have had a reasonable expectation of success — probably arrogance on my part — but still, many times an author who gets published once can get published a second time.
    Choire Sicha, Vulture, 30 Oct. 2024
Noun
  • Game of Thrones pushed the genre snobbery toward fantasy.
    Joe Reid, Vulture, 8 Nov. 2024
  • But actually, in the world of snobbery and class, that isn’t real.
    Mark Peikert, IndieWire, 29 Oct. 2024
Noun
  • The abuse victims’ attorneys, however, suggested that not funding the trust immediately would short-change people who had already been victimized by the church, given how the value of that trust could erode with time and inflation.
    Jakob Rodgers, The Mercury News, 10 Nov. 2024
  • Although inflation has dropped close to pre-pandemic levels, prices haven't receded and continue to impact consumers.
    Aimee Picchi, CBS News, 29 Oct. 2024
Noun
  • The full moon in your sign on Oct. 17 brings the focus back to your independence and personal goals, signaling a moment of release and self-assertion.
    Valerie Mesa, People.com, 7 Oct. 2024
  • As the story proceeds, the narrator dredges up more secrets, more cries for help that double as acts of self-assertion.
    Katy Waldman, The New Yorker, 4 Sep. 2024
Noun
  • Critics sometimes faulted his performances for pomposity.
    Jill Leovy, Los Angeles Times, 9 Sep. 2024
  • Berry says that Laszlo’s pomposity thrives because no one in the house is willing to call him out on his nonsense.
    Joe Otterson, Variety, 15 Aug. 2024
Noun
  • There was a kind of a snobbism about it.
    Julian Sancton, The Hollywood Reporter, 17 May 2022
  • Of course, culture shock works the other way around, too, and the image of Southerners who venture to the cold, bitter North for college only to be met by cultural snobbism and insulting assumptions about their identities is itself a stereotype.
    Nicole LaPorte, Town & Country, 2 Oct. 2022
Noun
  • With his chilly hauteur and unflattering Prince Valiant hairdo, Jordan is a plain villain amid characters who otherwise collectively lurch between sympathetic victimhood and viciously cruel mob mentality.
    Guy Lodge, Variety, 3 Sep. 2024
  • The Academy Award-winning actress, known for her fierce talent and daunting hauteur, boasts a career spanning 60 years.
    Ian Malone, Vogue, 16 July 2024
Noun
  • Too many liberals forgot this, which explains how a figure like Trump, with his boisterous and transgressive disdain for liberal pieties, could be reelected to the presidency.
    Bret Stephens, The Mercury News, 7 Nov. 2024
  • The southpaw hasn't voiced any disdain for the franchise and the Braves value him tremendously.
    David Faris, Newsweek, 4 Nov. 2024

Thesaurus Entries Near chest-thumping

Cite this Entry

“Chest-thumping.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/chest-thumping. Accessed 21 Nov. 2024.

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