蜂拥英语怎么说
Mourners thronged to the funeral.
The way they swarm or flock together does not usually get good press coverage either: marching like worker ants might be a common simile for city commuters, but it's a damning, not positive, image.
The crowd swarmed in all directions.
A rush for the exit is also likely.
In Athens demonstrators stormed up to the steps of the parliament building, where an austerity plan was about to be debated, calling on the parliamentary "thieves" to come out.
Money, bulldozers and cheap labor poured in.
Americans flocked to these fairs to admire the new machines and thus to renew their faith in the beneficence of technological advance.
You should get interested in a stock when its price gets trampled flat by investors stampeding out of it.
Opportunity beckoned and women flocked to Hollywood.
When senior scientists talk blue sky, the clouds are about to roll in.
Dozens of American contractors reportedly flocked into Pakistan.
A stampede broke out when the doors opened.
The town survives the onslaught of tourists every summer.
Thousands of people flocked to the beach this weekend.
On the day I attended the court last month, a throng mobbed the entrance and the security check took nearly an hour.
At the radio station, letters poured in for the Christmas wish competition.
Tourists now swarm through the old mission's whitewashed buildings.
Hundreds of football fans descended on the city.
The public has flocked to the show.
In the train of the rich and famous came the journalists.
Don't hurt yourself in the stampede to my office.
The late 1990s saw a stampede to Silicon Valley.
A stampede of energy companies has snapped up exploration rights, drilling more than 700 Wells last year alone, and building pipelines.
In the Saturday stampede, victims were crushed as bargain-hunters rushed to get into the French supermarket for a tenth anniversary sale.
Shanghaiist was the first to cover an article in the *** saying that the crowd turned into a stampede with rumors that one person died.