Matching Pairs March for our lives vocabularyOnline version Sentences extracted from a text and meanings by Elise Correa Rocha 1 President Donald Trump had yet to -WEIGH IN- on Twitter about the protests. 2 We will get rid of these public servants who only care about the gun -LOBBY-. 3 Students have -TAPped INTO- a current of gun control sentiment that has been building for years 4 -SUMMONed- to action by student survivors of the Florida school shooting, hundreds of thousands of teenagers and their supporters rallied in the nation's capital. 5 Organizers hope the passions of the crowds will translate into a -TIPPING POINT- starting with the elections. 6 Hundreds of thousands -DECRY- guns. 7 In addition to pushing for -TIGHTer- gun laws, the students have been working to register young people to vote. 8 More than 20,000 people filled a park near the school, -CHANTing- slogans such as "Enough is enough". 9 Protesters complained that they are tired of inaction by -GROWN-UPS-. 10 Yolanda Renee King gave a -ROUSING speech at the Washington rally. 11 A -BAN- on "weapons of war" for all but warriors. 12 Organizers of the big -RALLY- in the nation's capital hoped their protest would match in numbers and spirit last year's Women's March. 13 one of the biggest -YOUTH- protests since the Vietnam era 14 They called for such measures as a ban on high-capacity -MAGAZINEs- and assault-type rifles. 15 Our -BALLOTs- will stop bullets. 16 -DRAWing- from the civil rights leader's most famous words, she said: "I have a dream that enough is enough". call people to attend (a meeting) say or shout repeatedly in a singsong tone to publicly denounce exciting; stirring the piece of paper used to record someone's vote an official or legal prohibition to establish a connection with something, especially in order to take advantage of something adults a chamber for holding a supply of cartridges to be fed automatically to the breech of a gun to offer an opinion, advice, support, etc., especially in a forceful or authoritative way a mass meeting of people making a political protest or showing support for a cause a group of people seeking to influence politicians or public officials on a particular issue to take or obtain something from a particular source young people considered as a group fixed, fastened, or closed firmly; hard to move, undo, or open the point at which a series of small changes or incidents becomes significant enough to cause a larger, more important change