1. pummel - Noun
2. pummel - Verb
Same as Pommel.
Source: Webster's dictionaryI always say I have a Socratic approach to most things that I do. I pummel people with questions, because I need to know what they're thinking, what they're trying to achieve, what they believe the final outcome is going to be. Tim Gunn
By the nineteenth century... new circumstances called for new conformity enforcers... The government locked you in a house of penitence-a penetentiary-where your feelings of remorse would theoretically pummel you without cease. Howard Bloom
On 'American Gladiators,' I got to pummel a lot of people off a pyramid with a giant Q-tip. It was so much fun to wrestle people with no risk of getting knocked out or choked out. Gina Carano
Is there anything quite so ludicrous as two intellectuals grappling in a philosophy-department parking lot? Each of us wanted to pummel the other to a pulp, but neither knew how to go about it. James K. Morrow
Like every beginner, I have thought you could beat, pummel and thrash an idea into existence. Under such treatment, of course, any decent idea folds up its paws, turns on its back, fixes its eyes on eternity, and dies. Ray Bradbury
The pedestrians pummeled the demonstrators Source: Internet