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14 Sentences With "woofing"

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

All common farm work fare—except that unlike WOOFing, this one comes with a price tag.
Expect to see plenty more four-legged customers woofing down their meals at this pub very soon.
For a year starting at age 4 he pretended to be a dog and padded around the house on all fours, woofing, which may have been his first acting experience.
This month in particular, pets are showing up to pride parades (and on social media) wearing their most colorful rainbow gear and woofing support — loud and proud — for their LGBTQ people.
And it's not only bodybuilders that are adding some woofing weight to their workouts; all kinds of dog owners with all different kinds of dogs are getting in on the trend.
But Joey tells TMZ Sports ... he's been busting his ass to get back in top form -- and brags that he recently broke his own wiener record of 69 ... by woofing down 73.5 at the July 4th qualifier!!!!
Not anymore: with his puckered scowl and his preposterous narcissism, he clinched the Republican nomination with ease, serially vanquishing sixteen rivals rendered hapless by a campaign that made improvisation its organizing principle and fuelled itself on an unending stream of personal insult, racist woofing, and misogynist bile.
Even the amazing sound the kings made—a spiralling festive bray that was sort of like bagpipes, sort of like a holiday noise-maker, and sort of like the "woofing dog" sound on certain airplanes, but really like nothing on earth I'd ever heard—had a soothing effect when thousands of distant penguins were making it together.
This species is generally non-vocal, but utters hissing falsetto screams during social displays in the breeding season. These storks also engage in bill clattering and an audible “woofing” wing beat at breeding colonies Nestlings make a loud continual monotonous braying call to beg parental adults for food.
Quiet Waters also features unique Rent-a-Tent and Tepees, a marina with boats for rent, Woofing Waters dog park, several lakes for fishing, basketball courts, Splash Adventure children's water park that is open seasonally. There are also mountain bike trails and the Eagle's Nest children's open-space playground.
Such encounters are normally prevented, as the pair vocalises to advertise its presence in a given area. It is a highly vocal species, particularly in Southern Africa. Sounds made by the species include yelling, yelping, woofing, whining, growling, and cackling. It communicates with group members and advertises its presence by a high-pitched, whining howl, and expresses alarm through an explosive cry followed by shorter, high-pitched yelps.
By the end of October he had become a first team regular and was voted the SPL Young Player of the Month for October 2010. However, on 30 October 2010, Ki found himself the recipient of apparent racist abuse during a league match away at St Johnstone. A section of the St Johnstone support were heard making barking noises – "woofing" – at Ki as he took a corner kick.
According to the book Women in Parliament published in 2005, Soames has been named as the most prolific source of vulgar and sexist comments in the Houses of Parliament, with several female MPs stating that he has made vulgar comments to them. Soames regarded the claims as 'nonsense'. Barbara Follett said in 2007 that Soames was the worst of the sexist MPs in parliament. On 31 January 2017, Soames made 'woofing' noises at Tasmina Ahmed-Sheikh when she was asking the foreign secretary, Boris Johnson, a question in the House of Commons.
The Dozens is a game of spoken words between two contestants, common in black communities of the United States, where participants insult each other until one gives up. It is customary for the Dozens to be played in front of an audience of bystanders, who encourage the participants to reply with increasingly egregious insults in order to heighten the tension and, consequently, make the contest more interesting to watch. Playing the Dozens is also known as "blazing", "hiking", "roasting", "capping", "clowning", "ranking", "ragging", "rekking", "crumming", "sounding", "checking", "joning", "woofing", "wolfing", “skinning”, "sigging", "scoring" or "signifying",Lefever, Harry (Spring 1981). "Playing the Dozens": A Mechanism for Social Control, Phylon, Vol. 42, No. 1, pp. 73–85.

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