How to Use juggernaut in a Sentence

juggernaut

noun
  • The menu at The Red Hen, too, is hardly a juggernaut of a thing.
    Leonie Cooper, Vogue, 9 Mar. 2023
  • The juggernaut of history writes the A plot, the human the B plot.
    Rivka Galchen, The New Yorker, 27 Feb. 2024
  • The Dodgers are a juggernaut and won a franchise-record 111 games.
    Dylan Hernández, Los Angeles Times, 10 Oct. 2022
  • But none of this has slowed down the juggernaut that is the city’s elite social scene.
    Washington Post, 9 Apr. 2022
  • Over the next four decades, the brand has grown into a hot sauce juggernaut.
    Paul Stephen, San Antonio Express-News, 17 June 2022
  • The Warriors are a juggernaut, and this may have been the group’s final run.
    Katie McInerney, BostonGlobe.com, 28 Dec. 2022
  • Catch up quick: Henry has been a juggernaut for the Ravens.
    Nate Rau, Axios, 16 Oct. 2024
  • But the youngest team in the league isn’t quite ready to take down the San Francisco juggernaut, at least not this year.
    Baltimore Sun Staff, Baltimore Sun, 19 Jan. 2024
  • But there’s no juggernaut standing in the way this time around.
    Larry Starks, USA TODAY, 8 June 2021
  • The Chiefs offense is a juggernaut, but the Browns aren’t too shabby, either, on that side of the ball.
    Dan Labbe, cleveland, 14 Jan. 2021
  • Against those two juggernauts, the Knicks are a combined 0-3.
    Peter Sblendorio, New York Daily News, 18 Feb. 2025
  • The Astros are the juggernaut, but the Mariners will win a few more games, and the Astros might lose a couple more than last year.
    Daniel Kohn, SPIN, 29 Mar. 2023
  • But still, in the nascent days of his marketing juggernaut, Rafi was clear: no gloom and doom.
    Lane Sainty, The Arizona Republic, 22 Dec. 2024
  • The Houston Astros have been a juggernaut for much of the 2022 season.
    Michael Shapiro, Chron, 27 Oct. 2022
  • The scoring juggernaut has now notched up more than 795 goals for club and country.
    Rachel Cormack, Robb Report, 3 Mar. 2023
  • Amid all of this is the juggernaut that is Disney/Pixar’s Inside Out 2.
    Nancy Tartaglione, Deadline, 21 July 2024
  • The firm has grown into a juggernaut since it was founded three years ago.
    Alexander Osipovich, WSJ, 23 Aug. 2022
  • The show was a ratings juggernaut and won 10 Emmy Awards.
    Ashley Hume, FOXNews.com, 22 Apr. 2025
  • The Buckeyes have been an offensive juggernaut for the bulk of the season.
    Stephen Means, cleveland, 28 Feb. 2021
  • Zoom in: In the late 1970s, Marcus and Arthur Blank dreamed up and built a juggernaut in the home improvement retail world.
    Thomas Wheatley, Axios, 5 Nov. 2024
  • Maybe there is some truth to it and maybe there isn’t, but no one can question the fact that Cohen wants to turn the Mets into a juggernaut.
    Abbey Mastracco, New York Daily News, 9 Dec. 2024
  • Leo’s work builds on that of other great minds of the Christian right’s legal juggernaut.
    Katherine Stewart, The New Republic, 11 July 2022
  • Despite their gaudy record and star power on both sides of the ball, the Eagles have never felt like a juggernaut.
    Baltimore Sun Staff, Baltimore Sun, 24 Jan. 2025
  • As of March 14, the box-office juggernaut Eras Tour concert film is available to stream on Disney+.
    Moises Mendez Ii, TIME, 9 May 2024
  • This brand, of course, was a commercial juggernaut of the EDM era and the template many artists of the genre based their own business models on.
    Katie Bain, Billboard, 23 May 2023
  • The streaming service has long been a growth juggernaut.
    Nick Turner, Fortune, 21 Jan. 2022
  • These were juggernauts of the preteen library that helped define a certain vision of girlhood in the ’90s and the aughts.
    Fiorella Valdesolo, Vogue, 31 July 2024
  • Facing this year’s juggernaut of a Dodgers lineup can be hard enough.
    Jack Harris, Los Angeles Times, 23 Aug. 2022
  • And all the characterizations about the Lakers being a juggernaut and the Wolves being roadkill?
    Jon Krawczynski, New York Times, 1 May 2025
  • The fact that these comedic showdowns worked is a testament to Edi Patterson, the actress and writer who turned Judy into a juggernaut over four seasons of television.
    Brian Grubb, Vulture, 1 May 2025

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'juggernaut.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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