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stonk

n. A heavy artillery bombardment. vb. To unleash such a bombardment.

Usage examples of "stonk".

By this time Stonks and Torreycanyon were awake and the combined weight of the four of them was too much for the foreigner.

He looked round until he saw Adolf, a wet and muddy figure who was being hauled ashore by Stonks and Torreycanyon.

The car, completely out of control, bounced across the pavement narrowly missing Stonks and sending Adolf spinning into the gutter.

He took them away from the hateful memories of Engadine, and Bingo, secure on the shoulders of Stonks, sang a rousing Borrible song to himself, a song that told of the dangers past and the dangers to come.

Napoleon and Vulge prised Bingo up and away from the shoulders of Stonks and stood him on the ground.

Torreycanyon tied the rope to the slim trunk and threw the loose ends to Stonks, whose shape he could make out only dimly in the darkness below.

Stonks the Borrible spoke to Stonks the Rumble, both of them the strongest of their tribe.

The Rumble door-keeper at the end of the rope, true to his breeding and upbringing, held on tightly and shot through the doorway like the first Rumble rocket to the moon, knocking the Great Door open with such force that it would have killed Stonks had he not jumped away from the danger.

The rope became taut and even the remarkable strength of Stonks the Rumble could not hold onto it and it was torn from his grasp.

Good old Stonks was behind, guarding the Great Door, and it would take an avalanche of Rumbles to move him.

Even if Stonks was still guarding the way out there would be hundreds of Rumbles, all well armed, lying in ambush for them in the cold green grass of Rumbledom.

Perhaps, thought Knocker, Stonks had done for these Rumbles they saw about them, and then this powerful creature had taken him from behind as he fought in the tunnel.

Then the hands got hold of the snout and pulled hard and the whole furry cloak fell away to reveal none other than Stonks, the Borrible.

Anyway it had seemed to Stonks that it might help his defence of the Great Door, at least for a while, if he pretended to be a Rumble, and so he had donned the skin and it had worked very well, as they could see by the numbers of Rumbles lying about.

Borribles congratulated Stonks and patted him on the back and laughed again and again at his tale.