trudge
IPA: trˈʌdʒ
noun
- A tramp, i.e. a long and tiring walk.
verb
- (intransitive) To walk wearily with heavy, slow steps.
- (transitive) To trudge along or over a route etc.
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Examples of "trudge" in Sentences
- He trudged in the rain.
- He trudged back to his home.
- She trudged with her dog to her house.
- He then trudges through the mud to the tree.
- Giving plenty paid in pittance I trudge home.
- The poor girls had to trudge up and down the stairs.
- He trudged 2500 miles during the 18 months of captivity.
- I am here, I have trudged — do you like the word trudge?
- She would trudge home after lessons discouraged and frustrated.
- Afterwards, he must trudge the freezing land of Siberia, Russia.
- No need to trudge through all the history of castles and palaces.
- We had to trudge back down, too -- luckily on what was almost! a road.
- Annoyed, she put on her slippers and trudged to the cantankerous television.
- The biographical half of his book is hard-going, a trudge through lumpen text that often lacks cohesion.
- I kind of trudge through the evil stuff that I don't like doing, like the sanding and the this, that, and the other thing out of habit.
- But the 16 games he has played since returning to the lineup from post-concussion symptoms have been a trudge back to his place among the team's top four defensemen.
- And "we the people" -- overtaxed, over-policed, overburdened by big government, underrepresented by those who should speak for us and blissfully ignorant of the prison walls closing in on us -- will continue to trudge along a path of misery.
- It also captured that late night urgency, buzzing from pub to club to cafe, those Important Conversations like a campfire on an empty beach, weaving dreams of the future until the streetlights gave way to the dawn, and then the final trudge home (or sprint home fueled on booze and kebab).
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