How to Use cannon fodder in a Sentence
cannon fodder
noun- The poorly trained forces are little more than cannon fodder.
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In Ukraine, these former inmates have been used mostly as cannon fodder.
— Oleg Matsnev Gray Beltran, New York Times, 4 Dec. 2023 -
Still, the more men run from the draft, the less cannon fodder the Kremlin can send to Ukraine.
— Masha Gessen, The New Yorker, 5 Oct. 2022 -
The Texas schools are just cannon fodder for Jalen and Tua’s Heisman campaigns.
— Joseph Goodman | Jgoodman@al.com, al, 9 Oct. 2019 -
Wright State finished its season 22-14, but the Raiders were more than cannon fodder.
— Jay Posner, San Diego Union-Tribune, 18 Mar. 2022 -
Too often, the field gets lost in the folds, depicted as cannon fodder and not world-class players.
— Jon Wertheim, SI.com, 6 July 2018 -
His was the generation that served as cannon fodder for World War II.
— Daniel Ford, WSJ, 8 Mar. 2023 -
In Tom Herman’s world, a walk-on isn’t another body to be used as cannon fodder for the program’s crop of four- and five-star recruits.
— Nick Moyle, ExpressNews.com, 19 Aug. 2019 -
The right people were getting infected less, and the cannon fodder was leaping out of the trenches.
— Alex Shephard, The New Republic, 10 Aug. 2021 -
Albertsons drivers are cannon fodder in this battle, but many, many more will face the same fate.
— Michael Hiltzik, Los Angeles Times, 5 Jan. 2021 -
The most likely path for Russian reservists is as cannon fodder.
— Kyle Mizokami, Popular Mechanics, 22 Sep. 2022 -
The main cast once again got off without any major deaths while great newcomers were killed off like cannon fodder.
— Erik Kain, Forbes, 4 July 2022 -
Citizens are being asked to risk their lives for this idea, and Russian boys have been turned into cannon fodder.
— Andrei Kolesnikov, Foreign Affairs, 22 Aug. 2023 -
But according to the report, units that are less well trained and less well equipped are viewed as cannon fodder to be dispatched to attack Ukrainian lines in five-man teams.
— Sébastien Roblin, Popular Mechanics, 1 June 2023 -
But when has a dictator ever cared about his cannon fodder?
— WSJ, 28 Mar. 2022 -
Forces that were rushed to the front, like Wagner’s prison recruits, quickly became cannon fodder.
— Thomas Gibbons-Neff, New York Times, 24 Apr. 2023 -
Osechkin says the number of takers of such offers dropped off at one point when inmates began wising up to the fact that they might be used as cannon fodder.
— Amy Kellogg, Fox News, 14 Aug. 2022 -
In fact, projections show what will likely happen: The boy appears in a soldier’s uniform with a rifle, cannon fodder for the war to come.
— New York Times, 29 Dec. 2019 -
Fears of being 'cannon fodder' and a brutal response by police.
— Editors, USA TODAY, 25 Sep. 2022 -
Soldiers are fighting to preserve monarchies and a class system that views them as little more than cannon fodder.
— Gary Thompson, Philly.com, 28 Mar. 2018 -
Instead the Assad regime has turned to Shia militias, often made up of Afghans drafted and organised by Iran, as cannon fodder.
— The Economist, 12 Apr. 2018 -
Newcastle and Arsenal are on the agenda after that, and both sides have iffy records against Watford - could be ideal cannon fodder to get Deulofeu back on track.
— SI.com, 22 Aug. 2019 -
And all of them have seen their nationals slaughtered at a far higher rate than ethnic Russians during the war in Ukraine—turned into cannon fodder, once more, for a despot in the Kremlin.
— Casey Michel, The New Republic, 16 Sep. 2022 -
Rumor had it that the Ukrainians were using volunteers as cannon fodder.
— Seth Harp, Harper’s Magazine , 22 June 2022 -
For the first time in its history, UAB has the pieces in place to be something more than Power 5 cannon fodder during a bizarre season shaped by the coronavirus pandemic.
— Joseph Goodman | Jgoodman@al.com, al, 9 Sep. 2020 -
Moreover, there is a cost to allowing allies to become cannon fodder.
— The Editors, National Review, 8 Oct. 2019 -
But there's still something agreeable about a franchise that makes racist idiots the cannon fodder—and if the entries keep improving at the same rate, part three might really be something.
— A.a. Dowd, Chron, 16 Mar. 2023 -
Opposition to the first war in Chechnya in the mid-1990s was spurred by Russian families angry that their conscript sons were being used as cannon fodder.
— New York Times, 21 Apr. 2022 -
The problem with this strategy is that, for Trump and his would-be cannon fodder alike, this whole exercise is substantially about feeling over fact.
— Bonnie Kristian, TheWeek, 9 Dec. 2020 -
Across four locations in the Bakhmut area, Ukrainian soldiers described how Wagner troops at times appear to have been used almost as cannon fodder.
— Robyn Dixon, Washington Post, 22 Oct. 2022
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'cannon fodder.' 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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