I got this from the musical "Les Misérables" :
"Now we pledge ourselves to hold this barricade."
Hope it helps...
She barricaded the door with a table..........That table served as a barricade.
They needed to barricde the door in order to keep the killers out.
The noun 'barricade' functions as the subjectof a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:A barricade was blocking the parking lot entrance. (subject of the sentence)The parking lot that the barricade blocked was freshly painted. (subject of the clause)We didn't cross the barricade, we walked to the next street. (direct object of the verb)The officer used his vehicle as a barricade. (object of the preposition)
-But before long we came to a barricade fixed across the street, and then to another. -They take as much genuine pleasure in building a barricade as they do in cutting a throat or shoving a friend into the Seine.
suppressive barricade
BARRICADE
Barricade
Protective barricade
'Barricade' CAN BE used as a noun, thusly: "Stay behind the barricade, please." However, it is used as a verb thusly: "Please do not barricade that alley."
Your choice. I personally prefer the normal barricade
The Barricade
suppresive barricade