B2 verb Neutre

bulldozer

/ˈbʊlˌdoʊz/

To clear land or demolish buildings using a heavy tractor, or metaphorically, to force someone to do something through intimidation or brute persistence. It implies an unstoppable force that ignores obstacles or the feelings of others.

Exemples

3 sur 5
1

The city council plans to bulldoze the abandoned factory to create a new park.

The city council plans to demolish the abandoned factory using heavy machinery to create a new park.

2

The government was criticized for trying to bulldoze the controversial bill through the legislature.

The government was criticized for trying to force the controversial bill through the legislature without enough debate.

3

My boss tried to bulldoze me into working over the weekend, but I stood my ground.

My boss tried to pressure or intimidate me into working over the weekend, but I refused.

Famille de mots

Nom
bulldozer
Verb
bulldoze
Adjectif
bulldozed
Apparenté
bulldozing
💡

Astuce mémo

Visualize a 'Bull' giving a 'Dose' of medicine—the word originally meant a 'dose fit for a bull' to describe severe intimidation.

Quiz rapide

The developer had to ___ several old trees to make room for the new driveway.

Correct !

La bonne réponse est : bulldoze

Exemples

1

The city council plans to bulldoze the abandoned factory to create a new park.

everyday

The city council plans to demolish the abandoned factory using heavy machinery to create a new park.

2

The government was criticized for trying to bulldoze the controversial bill through the legislature.

formal

The government was criticized for trying to force the controversial bill through the legislature without enough debate.

3

My boss tried to bulldoze me into working over the weekend, but I stood my ground.

informal

My boss tried to pressure or intimidate me into working over the weekend, but I refused.

4

Scholars argue that colonial powers often bulldoze indigenous legal systems to impose their own.

academic

Scholars argue that colonial powers often forcibly replace indigenous legal systems to impose their own.

5

Our competitors are trying to bulldoze our market share by lowering prices to unsustainable levels.

business

Our competitors are trying to aggressively take over our market share by lowering prices significantly.

Famille de mots

Nom
bulldozer
Verb
bulldoze
Adjectif
bulldozed
Apparenté
bulldozing

Collocations courantes

bulldoze through opposition to move forward despite strong disagreement
bulldoze a path to clear a way by removing obstacles
bulldoze into a decision to force someone to decide quickly and under pressure
bulldoze a building to knock down a structure with a tractor
bulldoze resistance to crush any attempts to stop an action

Phrases Courantes

bulldoze your way in

to enter a place or situation by force or aggressive behavior

to be bulldozed

to be forced or intimidated into doing something

like a bulldozer

acting in a powerful, unstoppable, and perhaps insensitive manner

Souvent confondu avec

bulldozer vs bully

To bully is to repeatedly harass someone weaker; to bulldoze is to use force to overcome a specific obstacle or resistance.

bulldozer vs demolish

Demolish refers specifically to destroying structures; bulldoze can refer to land clearing or metaphorical coercion.

📝

Notes d'usage

In common English, 'bulldoze' is the verb form. While the noun is 'bulldozer', the verb describes the action of using that machine or acting with similar unstoppable force.

⚠️

Erreurs courantes

Learners often use 'bulldozer' as the verb (e.g., 'They bulldozer the house'), but the correct verb is 'bulldoze'.

💡

Astuce mémo

Visualize a 'Bull' giving a 'Dose' of medicine—the word originally meant a 'dose fit for a bull' to describe severe intimidation.

📖

Origine du mot

From the late 19th-century Americanism 'bull-dose', meaning a 'dose fit for a bull,' originally referring to a severe whipping used as intimidation.

Modèles grammaticaux

regular verb: bulldoze, bulldozed, bulldozing often used with the preposition 'into' + person + 'doing' often used with the preposition 'through' + obstacle
🌍

Contexte culturel

The term is frequently used in political journalism to describe leaders who push policies through without considering minority opinions.

Quiz rapide

The developer had to ___ several old trees to make room for the new driveway.

Correct !

La bonne réponse est : bulldoze

Mots lis

subservtude

C1

To relegate something or someone to a subordinate, secondary, or submissive position in relation to another. It involves the active process of making an interest, person, or entity serve a higher or more dominant power.

inbioery

C1

The practice or industry of utilizing biological systems, living organisms, or derivatives to manufacture products and provide services at an industrial scale. It specifically refers to the integration of biotechnology within industrial frameworks to create sustainable alternatives to traditional chemical manufacturing.

hypergraphal

C1

To structure, analyze, or represent complex data sets using the principles of hypergraphs, where single connections can link multiple entities simultaneously. This verb describes the action of mapping multi-way relationships that exceed the capacity of traditional binary graphs.

resedancy

C1

To live or have one's permanent home in a particular place, or to be inherent or present in a specific person, quality, or legal power. It is a more formal term than 'live' and is often used in legal, political, or technical contexts.

exstaship

C1

Describing a state of profound, transcendent joy and communal connection that elevates the individual beyond their ordinary experience. It is often used in philosophical or psychological contexts to characterize a sense of unified elation within a group or relationship.

microsimiltion

C1

Describing a modeling or analytical approach that focuses on the behavior of individual units or agents within a system to predict aggregate outcomes. It is used to characterize high-resolution simulations that account for granular details rather than broad generalizations.

overdocible

C1

An adjective describing someone who is excessively teachable or overly compliant to a fault. It implies a level of submissiveness that prevents a person from questioning instructions or exercising independent judgment.

circumsistency

C1

The state or quality of being circumstantial, referring to the detailed and specific conditions surrounding an event or situation. It describes the meticulous attention to the context and particularities of a moment rather than general or abstract principles.

exheredive

C1

To formally and legally disinherit an heir or exclude them from receiving a portion of a deceased person's estate. This action typically involves a specific clause in a will that explicitly removes a person's natural right to inheritance.

misciscy

C1

Misciscy refers to the state or quality of being composed of diverse, varied, or unrelated elements gathered together into a single entity. It is typically used in technical or academic contexts to describe a collection that lacks a singular unifying theme but possesses a broad range of components.

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