Thesaurus.com
Dictionary.com
Definitions

flatfoot

[flat-foot, -foot] / ˈflætˌfʊt, -ˈfʊt /
















Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

But of course the movie’s main literary business, its principal reason for existing, is implied by the fedoras and floppy neckties, the cigarettes and slugs of whiskeys, the flatfoots and dangerous blondes.

From New York Times

“Christmas in the Smokies,” its signature show, has been running since 1990, with a live orchestra and Appalachian storytelling, a flatfoot dancer and a fiddler.

From New York Times

There was clogging, stomping and flatfoot dancing; the Dutch and English square-dancing with the Africans and the Irish.

From Washington Post

She started writing weekly emails to all her contacts, sharing videos and offering online classes in flatfoot dancing and clogging.

From New York Times

When Luft tried to control Garland’s pill intake, she turned his “concern into a game,” he said, referring to him as “the cop, the narc, the flatfoot.”

From Los Angeles Times