View example sentences and word forms for Goliaths.
Goliaths meaning
plural of goliath
Example sentences (15)
BAFTA voters largely rejected Hollywood goliaths, including blockbuster “Top Gun: Maverick” and Steven Spielberg’s Golden Globe champ “The Fabelmans,” as Germany instead led the way.
Cook might claim that he has shown how the Davids can take on the Goliaths and win.
The theme, pitting privileged "Goliaths" vs. the weaker, lower-class "Davids," is one of their more doofy ideas, especially since there are plenty of head-scratchers that don't quite fit on both tribes.
He is calling on the government to rein in the tech goliaths by establishing a “social licence”.
Here, you have chances for goliaths.
At barely 6-foot-6, he was comparatively slight to the Goliaths stalking the NBA, which only made him that much more relatable to a generation tirelessly mimicking his jackknifing, buzzer-beating, fadeaway jumpers.
There is an excellent program on that details the means by which these internet Goliaths manipulate their subjects.
Yet even if so, Iranian speed boats don’t have anything resembling a sling powerful enough to take down multiple Goliaths.
Experience matters, as the pressure of the moment is often why smaller schools falter down the stretch against the Goliaths of the sport.
I also didn’t necessarily want it to just be the Davids picking off the Goliaths either.
Just as history is written by the victors, eras of cinema are defined by Goliaths.
Not only did the Goliaths have a 3-2 majority, but his connection with struck a chord, leading to the creation of the “Rock Stars” duo.
That was the best part of my game, Matt. It was the best part of my game because I watched the rest of the Goliaths have absolute meltdowns and I was the only one that was steady during the cyclones.
Then there are the Goliaths, ten people who also share one thing, capitalizing on their advantage and use it to squash their opponents.
To Italy he became an idol, a demi-god, a legend, epitomising all that young Italy aspired to be; the man who 'did the impossible', not once but habitually, the David who slew the Goliaths in the great sport of motor racing.