Verb
I was so angry I felt like walloping him. walloped the branches of the pear tree with a stick in an effort to knock down some fruitNoun
felt the wallop of a car crashing into their front porch
gave the ball a good wallop with the bat
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Verb
The Broncos traveled to Seattle to open the 2023 season and were walloped 56-19 by the Huskies.—Jim Keyser, Idaho Statesman, 13 Dec. 2025 The Soviets had walloped the United States in a pre-Olympic exhibition game at Madison Square Garden, but the Americans got hot at the right time.—Ryan Morik, FOXNews.com, 13 Dec. 2025
Noun
The wallop to Heuvel’s business comes at an already taxing time for California’s wine industry, with supply levels at total odds with market demand.—Kelli María Korducki, thehustle.co, 5 Dec. 2025 The powerful, alcohol-forward Turtle Doves definitely packed a wallop.—Brady MacDonald, Oc Register, 4 Dec. 2025 See All Example Sentences for wallop
Word History
Etymology
Verb
Middle English walopen to gallop, from Old French (Picard dialect) waloper
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