0 past simple and past participle of storm --
1 to attack a place or building by entering suddenly in great numbers: --
2 to express anger in a loud and often uncontrolled way: --
[ + speech ] "Get out and never come back!" he stormed.
He appears to have stormed ahead when the forces of reaction were battling hard against him.
One day a doctor stormed into my room, his face white with fury.
He stormed out of the meeting, objecting that the idea was an unwarranted intrusion on privacy—and look what happened to him.
Understandably aggrieved, he tore a strip off the staff in front of royalty and stormed out.
They were twice repelled, but the third time they stormed the palisades.
He stormed it with a considerable measure of success, and got away with a good deal of booty.
They stormed that building and set it ablaze.
The tragedy provoked when the security forces stormed the jails caused public outrage.