How To Use Amble In A Sentence

  • She's getting old and she tends to ramble a bit.
  • Lost in nostalgic souvenirs I ambled past les belles, snapping a few more photos along the way. Kindness of strangers
  • Keeping specific goals and metrics for testing in mind not only helps track status and results, but also avoids the last-second scramble to pull together necessary reports.
  • He was eighty years old and in a coma when his horse won the Hambletonian Stakes, the supreme prize. Celebrities
  • Stick us in a virgin paradise, and we create great honeycombed bureaucracies, vast bramble-fields of rules and regulations, ornate politburos filled with policymaking politicos, and, above all, tangled webs of power.
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  • It cannot be smoked, drunk or gambled away. Times, Sunday Times
  • By contrast, when Procter & Gamble, the makers of Olestra, asked the FDA for permission to add its artificial fat substitute to potato chips, the controversial product was evaluated under food-additive laws.
  • She learned to scramble around and even run sideways, but not forward.
  • They evidently find the densely planted crop a satisfactory alternative to the nettles and brambles that they generally build in. Times, Sunday Times
  • The arrival of the charity van set off a minor riot as villagers scrambled for a share of the aid.
  • Despite the lateness of the hour Annabel gathered her skirts and prepared to take a solitary ramble in the garden.
  • The family made the amazing find while on a nature ramble in the woods.
  • Learn about regular vs. high low strategies in stud poker in this free casino poker instructional video from our expert card player and professional casino gambler.
  • Those buyers not up to speed might find they are left behind in the scramble to get onto the property ladder. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is the other side of a public bridle path and almost overgrown with vicious brambles. Times, Sunday Times
  • 'Th' Rambler fr'm Clare 'beautifully on what they call a pickle-e-o befure they sarved a rayplivin writ on him. Mr. Dooley: In the Hearts of His Countrymen
  • However, in a mad final scramble, the Vipers were able to hold on to win their fourth straight Stampede Challenge title.
  • The law is predicted to bring benefits not just for ramblers but for the whole region by attracting more walkers and tourists.
  • Carpenter scrambled out of the pocket, pulled up at the line of scrimmage and shoveled the ball to Thompson, who outleaped two defenders under the goal post. USATODAY.com
  • For a moment I feared I was going to drown as I lay pole-axed on the shingle, but scrambled free in time. Country diary: Western Cumbria
  • I have not seen such a drunken shambles for ages - he was really struggling, slurring his words, the lot.
  • Instead, I'd gambled all my sweetness only to find out I was disposable.
  • The group scattered and Justin scrambled to the school.
  • On Seventh Avenue, slack-jawed visitors scrambled for digital cameras, and taxicabs actually slowed down for something other than a fare.
  • And I've rambled on far too much, but only because I warmed to the subject as I was writing about it.
  • I want to walk along a tropical beach at sunset or ramble through a ruined temple at sunrise.
  • With more than 50 million Larsson books sold world-wide, publishers scrambled to anoint his literary heir—preferably a political and prolix Scandinavian. Tattooed by Politics
  • And pachinko is a national obsession, the parlours offering gaudy arrays of noisy pinball machines where many Japanese contentedly gamble the hours away.
  • The riders, known as scramblers, are illegally riding their motorbikes, quad bikes and scooters across Crane Park and are tearing up the ground in the process.
  • Taking the penalty was a bad choice, but I also don't know if Big Easy was ever going to unscramble it, Keoghan says. Amazing Race: Phil Keoghan Explains Why These 11 Teams Have Unfinished Business
  • The Russian air force scrambled a fighter jet to intercept a Manchester-bound airliner that had strayed into its air space
  • The first uses what AirTight now alternately refers to as a "vulnerability" or a "limitation" in the 802.11 specification: a shared encryption key called the group temporal key (GTK), shared by all clients connected to the same access point, can't detect an address spoofing attempt (the pairwise keys, which are used to scramble data between a given client and the access point, can). AirTight defends Wi-Fi WPA2 'vulnerability' claim
  • Firstly, the verbal preambles to nearly all of his songs seemed very long and involved - a shortcoming of many singer/song-writers.
  • The odds against bringing it back upstream, through the tangle of brambles and nettles and against such a flow, were minuscule. Times, Sunday Times
  • Its inner horseshoe of tables remains the premier spot for early-morning dealmaking over smoked salmon and scrambled eggs. Times, Sunday Times
  • Again, if demand for rented accommodation slackens further, investors might high-tail it out of the market, pushing prices down in the scramble.
  • I'll have tomato juice, waffles, scrambled eggs and tea.
  • He dips his chin, and just as an expectant gasp ripples through the crowd, Eddie launches himself over the wall into a bramble of wild roses.
  • Pascoe heard her scream and scrambled across junk and debris in the darkness.
  • Jaworski says McNabb diminishes the impact of his inaccuracy by being an elite scrambler and rarely making stupid throws, and that was true even during his struggles.
  • Jigeehuu ambled shakily over to it after our first embrace and ladled out half a pint for me in a rice bowl.
  • Es una pregunta clara y directa que para cualquier persona letrada del mundo, en cualquier idioma, entiende que lo que esta pregunta hace es indagar si se instala o no otra urna, una cuarta, para decidir si se convoca o no a una Asamblea Nacional Constituyente. The Volokh Conspiracy » CRS on the Honduras “Coup”:
  • Unleashed, she is a maenad: not crabby but sardonic and perpetually restless, she scrambles over the stage, squaring up to several men at a time; she drinks from a hip flask; she wees; she smokes – and she fumes. The Taming of the Shrew; The Trial of Ubu; Our New Girl – review
  • This friend - who in an ironic twist of fate, appears in the film not as a gambler, but as the casino manager - would sneak down to the casino, after hours, and start playing with feverous intensity.
  • He unfurled the blanket insulation over the concertina wire and scrambled over the fence as a Doberman streaked toward him, snarling. THE KILL CLAUSE
  • What a complete and utter shambles. Times, Sunday Times
  • Tall grassland is scattered with hawkweed, ragwort, wild carrot and melilot flowers, along with clumps of bird's-foot trefoil, lucerne and goat's rue, and there are regular uprisings of brambles and wild rose, and sprawls of sallow and birch scrub. Country Diary: Canvey Wick, Essex
  • I apologise for the lack of preamble to yesterday's last post.
  • Desire kept his head down and held his gait to an ordinary shamble, all to come as close as he could. HAMMERFALL
  • She coughed, expelling the last of the water, and scrambled to her feet.
  • Bush the gambler is betting that he will come out looking like President Reagan, whose deficits bought economic reforms and a stronger national defense. The Budget Debate, IX, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • Yet when it happens there is a mad scramble to see what is possible in terms of rescue and then what needs to be put in place to avert marine ecological disaster, prior to rescuing or salvaging the vessel.
  • There was an element of ill luck, but every so often, as gamblers would tell us, long odds do come off.
  • Those are two big gambles and their outcome may be a big determinant of the result of the next general election. Times, Sunday Times
  • Online gambling and spread-betting are now the highest risk areas of addiction for problem gamblers, according to a survey published yesterday. Times, Sunday Times
  • Dominion States of America tramble the country from sea to shining sea? WN.com - Articles related to Capital gains tax: Obsorne 'looking to take sting out'
  • Get out your DC decoder rings to descramble this message. Timothy Karr: Change or Cha-ching?
  • We broadly agree with the analysis outlined in the preamble to Threshold 21.
  • I walked on to the bar, grabbed two beers and ambled back to her towel. Times, Sunday Times
  • Ambleve; or you may still cling for a little while to the fringe of the Ardennes, which is also the fringe of the industrial country, and explore the valley of the Meuse westward, past Huy and Namur, to Dinant. Beautiful Europe: Belgium
  • a scrambled plan of action
  • Lisa accurately predicts the winners of sporting events that Homer gambles on so she can be closer to her father.
  • We ambled by the water passing moorhens, ducks, geese, rabbits and squirrels.
  • He is a perfect rat in appearance, but he would rather astonish one of our English tom-cats if encountered during his rambles in search of rats, as the "bandicoot" is about the same size as the cat. Eight Years' Wanderings in Ceylon
  • I carried her with me and placed her on the ladder and she scrambled up, her little, ragged dress catching momentarily on the nails of the rafters.
  • To get through the night I amble around the main shopping areas. The Sun
  • An emergency squad of 600 plumbers and electricians has been drafted in to repair the shambles. The Sun
  • The case may establish for the first time that bookmakers owe a duty of care to compulsive gamblers. Times, Sunday Times
  • When you're all set, click the Start button in the Recording Controls option and ramble away!
  • Even in midwinter, in the icy church, the blushing bride would throw aside her broadcloth cape or camblet roquelo and stand up clad in a sprigged India muslin gown with only a thin lace tucker over her neck, warm with pride in her pretty gown, her white bonnet with ostrich feathers and embroidered veil, and in her new husband. Sabbath in Puritan New England
  • After their bowling inadequacies were exposed earlier in the series, Australia gambled this time by dropping a batsman.
  • Meanwhile, world leaders scrambled for new ways to prop up the euro. Times, Sunday Times
  • The social democrats gambled on bourgeois democracy and the stability of capitalism.
  • Their religion forbids them to drink or gamble.
  • We sat and watched the screen as it fizzed black and white shapes that during the course of the last three hours had scrambled my tiny mind.
  • `No need to lock your door and switch on your scrambler, I'm not after His Lordship. CASCADES - THE DAY OF THE DEAD
  • Britons have been swapping bets on royal foibles for decades - many gambled on the name Diana would choose for her eldest son - but recent years have seen an expansion in the scope of the bets offered by mainstream bookmakers. The Seattle Times
  • The machine had some other features to increase the complexity: There was a plugboard to further scramble the letters, and the machine came equipped with half a dozen or so rotors, of which 3 (later 4) were inserted at any one time. Conservapedia - Recent changes [en]
  • Euro Crime on Penguin reissue of Eric Ambler classics. Books
  • He just kind of ambled out of the alley like he was out for a midnight stroll or something. Sunlight Through The Shadows Magazine Volume 1 Issue 1 (ANSI Edition)
  • I can vouch there is more dog dirt in Renaissance Florence than the pathways around Windermere and Ambleside - and that takes some beating.
  • There are more than half a million problem gamblers and calls to the country's leading helpline rose by more than a third in the last year. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was a real scramble to the top of the hillside.
  • If you're a serious rambler , you'll be very specific about the season, the destination, the pace and even the goal of your hike.
  • Some scramble for the freshly scrubbed MBAs; others want analysts who come from the industry they will cover.
  • He uses terms like commensalism and epiphyte, and primary and secondary forest, and crepuscular; and our brains scramble to keep up. Valerie Tarico: Madagascar: West Knows Best
  • Set in Los Angeles of the 1930s, it depicts a dark and uncertain world, a world of pornographers and gamblers.
  • The North West Air Ambulance was then scrambled to the area which is inaccessible to vehicles.
  • It's a gamble that can backfire badly. Times, Sunday Times
  • I mean, hell, if I was accused of molesting children, had a face falling apart, a career in shambles, and had become a mockery of my former self, I'd be on drugs too. Archive: Oct 08 - Mar 09
  • He broke his leg in his scramble down the wall.
  • The girl scrambled over the wall.
  • As they watched, one of the players shambled over to the jukebox and fed a handful of coins into it.
  • It is hard to avoid stormy waves when you are sailing in rivers;and it is hard to avoid brambles when you are climbing rugged mountains.We hope you can fearlessly fight the stormy waves and hack your way through the jungle.
  • The pair had a bite to eat and a gamble. The Sun
  • Genocchio subdivides the book by a series of alliterative section headings and short preambles but it is generally less than apparent why pieces are included in
  • He ambled over to the nearest tree - happily some metres from where I stood hidden, and turned towards the tower.
  • He scrambled to his little feet, his eyes were wild with something old, stronger and feral, panting and gasping for air.
  • It was a long scramble to the top of the hill.
  • Hence their scramble to divert domestic rubbish anywhere but landfill. Times, Sunday Times
  • Famblee an frendz kno tew jus start tawkin an iffen ai kan ai wil pikkup….moastlee….unles ahm tyred…er annoyd….er crankeeier tahn uzuzl….inn wich kaise tehy prolly doan wanna tawk tew meh aneewai! But Iz don’t wants to be baptized and welcome ceiling - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • Instead of falling dead, though, the figure shambled after his head.
  • He bred 120 giant tortoises which amble freely around the island. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is one thing to kick the establishment, quite another to take a gamble of such epic proportions. Times, Sunday Times
  • He ambles off, casual in shorts and a shirt, to unspool that next film from his bubbling brain. Times, Sunday Times
  • “It could take a week to descramble the codes, but manual control should still be available.” Star Trek: Typhon Pact Paths of Disharmony
  • In a sudden panic he began to scramble down.
  • That is why the scramble to calm anger by launching an official inquiry has become such a tangled affair. Times, Sunday Times
  • The necessity of making a living disentranced him from his gamble.
  • The room was in shambles and their master laid crumpled and bleeding on the floor.
  • Scramble’ is the right word for this donnybrook.
  • The LA Times is reporting that former Fry's executive and accused embezzler, Omar Siddiqui, once gambled away $8 million in a single day. The Consumerist: February 2009 Archives
  • Few firms will be willing to gamble on new products.
  • He's a liar, a cheat and he gambles as well. The Sun
  • He scrambled to the floor and was about to dive under the bed when the door swung inwards and the light from the corridor blinded him for a moment.
  • Mr Benjamin complained of Mr Russell of the 'Times' for holding him up to fame as a "gambler" -- a story which he understood Mr Russell had learnt from Mr Charles Sumner at Washington. Three Months in the Southern States, April-June 1863
  • I'd like to zhuzh up my scrambled eggs - any recommendations on things to add to make them a bit more tasty?
  • Carn Mor Dearg lies on the eastern arm of the horseshoe ridge that includes Ben Nevis and is a favourite with scramblers who climb ‘The Ben’.
  • Instead firms are cutting the money they put into pension funds and telling workers to gamble their savings on the stockmarket through private schemes.
  • When my mom and dad came in a while later, I had the eggs scrambled and cooked to a nice golden brown.
  • Gardiner, reinforced by so-called sportsmen from other parts of the state, of all the park elk they could kill, -- bulls, cows and calves, -- because a large band wandered across the line into the shambles of Gardiner, on Buffalo Flats. Our Vanishing Wild Life Its Extermination and Preservation
  • We descended and scrambled and zigged and zagged and trudged ever on.
  • Learn how to deal Texas Holdem in this free casino poker instructional video from our expert card player and professional casino gambler.
  • So when he started towards me, I scrambled off the oxsain, fled into the weaver 's. HERE BE DRAGONS
  • A roadshow hits the region this week to promote new walking rights which should open up large swathes of land to ramblers and countryside enthusiasts.
  • A low-slung chassis, no more than 15 inches at the shoulder, enables the basset to tunnel through bramble and brush like a four-legged rototiller.
  • It was a gamble that paid off in the most golden of coinage when Fletcher netted the play-off clincher four minutes later.
  • The ground was rocky and Damian quickly scrambled over to Thera.
  • She managed to scramble out of the vehicle as it burst into flames.
  • For most of us that means a ramble across the North York Moors, or a bracing walk along the east coast before map reading our way back to the car for a flask of tea.
  • Pedestrians took their lives in their hands running the tree-lined gauntlet, forced to scramble up steep bankings if two vehicles met on the narrow stretch.
  • Don't just amble along to the open day and absorb the positive PR. Times, Sunday Times
  • The arrival of the charity van set off a minor riot as villagers scrambled for a share of the aid.
  • I thought that given a better part he could have fulfilled the promise he showed but not as the stereotyped gambler with a heart, which has so littered the American musical scene since Gaylord Ravenal applied for a job on a showboat.
  • One of Robert's granddaughters slipped into the water as the family scrambled from one housetop to another.
  • In the Little Shambles, too, there are many curious details in the high gables, pargeting and oriel windows. Yorkshire
  • Around 7000 fans have voiced their opinions on the Scottish football omnishambles through the SFA's national fans survey.
  • A woman shouted in Spanish in the hallway, cursing a man's retreating shamble. THE LAST RAVEN
  • Her third husband, Josef, the soi-disant Baron Freytag-Loringhoven, gives her a taste of the high life, gambles away his money, then disappears.
  • Bad scrambled eggs are beyond the pale: insipid, pale lemon yellow fading to a bilious grey - granular, curdling or lying in a puddle of whey-like liquid.
  • Please also note that both of these pieces require rather more time/attention/concentration than your average hit-and-run blogramble.
  • It warms from the inside with brambles, cherry and plums.
  • In course of the Turkish empire declining rapidly, the great powers of Europe started to scramble for the empire's heritage. Among the powers, Russia was a chief director in the partitions of Turkey.
  • Following a path without caring where it led as he pondered, he was brought up short when a doe and her young fawn scrambled quickly to their feet and bounded off.
  • Francie, and muckle ado I had to keep ye baith in order when ye were on the ramble. Saint Ronan's Well
  • Your average Lakeland visitor will at the very least manage a quick hike around Windermere or perhaps a ramble around Grasmere.
  • Scritch, scratch, scramble, through the thorny bushes!
  • Craving the arancini at Galleria Umberto, she drove in the other day, hoping to win the scramble for parking before the pizzeria sold out.
  • Its times like this i thank God i was born and bred in Aus! why is it when someone complains about, the mess around our island someone else has to try and turn the whole scene around, justiffing what is true and what is not. we dont need photos to poove a point? just walk down the sliema / gzira sea front after a saterday or sunday evening and open your eyes. its a shambles. plastic bottles undar benches. waste from take aways ect. Timesofmalta.com
  • The ‘puritan forebears’ who didn't drink, swear, gamble, or fool around are pretty much an invention of 19th and 20th century Comstockery.
  • Ay, mighty well — very well — a silk camblet, I think — very well, truly! — Clarissa Harlowe
  • Last year, he gambled with crossover success and fell flat on his face.
  • Your ramble is up the toboggan path and down by the stream through the pinewoods. CHALLENGE FOR THE CHALET SCHOOL
  • A rambler had left the footpath for a picnic, despite signs saying ‘Please remain on the footpath’.
  • In the mid-1980s, he gambled his export-quota profits on property and stock.
  • Mary is the love of beauty, or of God; the bramble is the stupidity and grossness of the practical world. Personality in Literature
  • Anyone with an interest in the countryside has a role to play in eradicating the disease: from the livestock farmer to the rambler and mountain biker.
  • The ball shot through my legs and we managed to scramble two byes.
  • He said: 'It was a shambles on air. Times, Sunday Times
  • Over by the bar a good-looking boy in the dusty clothes of a trailhand just in from Virginia City and his oxlike older brother had gotten into a vociferous argument over a girl with a dark-haired gambler, their voices rising higher and higher over Ishmael's quiet instructions to Jason. Ishmael
  • The rambles are £5, for example, while gliding was £30.
  • One of the nicest and simplest ski-free activities is simply to go for a walk, as I discover when I take a gentle amble from Sunnbüel to the Schwarenbach mountain hut.
  • I've ambled down quiet back roads where tiny children laugh their way home from school.
  • But, remember, you will have passed the Rubicon, when once you have been shaven: if you repent, and let your beard grow, your mouth will by-and-by show no longer what Messer Angelo calls the divine prerogative of lips, but will appear like a dark cavern fringed with horrent brambles.
  • The turtle waddled down the bank of the slough, out onto a rotten railroad tie through an obstacle course of brambles and beer cans, and, to my surprise, vanished with a wet slap, proving that this water was still alive.
  • That was the only goal of the first half but Jimmy Spencer poked home in a goalmouth scramble just before the hour.
  • The ducks on the river were managing the torrents and we thought we could manage the riverside amble.
  • Every weekend he drinks and gambles away his earnings.
  • It was a brave gamble, a bid for power, by an ambitious, clever and canny politician who saw his career facing a premature end.
  • Do not let your answers ramble on too long. How to Face Interviews
  • The highest rated are also the most colourful - dried fruits, brambles, strawberries, spinach, beetroot and sweet potatoes.
  • Is it all this broken-up breccia or is there, maybe, a big old finger of basalt sticking up that we could scramble right on down? THE FALLEN MAN
  • People want to gamble and technology allows many new forms of gambling. The Sun
  • Stand off Andy Hirst caused panic in the home defence with a high bomb which was scrambled out of play.
  • However, Murphy proving to be the master tactician took a gamble that the roads would dry under the windy conditions and had the car shod with completely slick tyres.
  • Trade isn't exactly brisk, although there's a handful of regular commuters and up to 100 ramblers on good days, so ferrymen traditionally find something else to do. Britain's Best Views: the Mersey ferry, Liverpool
  • Scientists' careers depend on publishing studies, and they often have to scramble to get the money to do them.
  • But the absence of the traditional enemy didn't spoil the fun for assortment of enthusiasts including gunslingers, gamblers, and their womenfolk.
  • The Vegas audience of polyester-clad gamblers and middle-aged couples contrast starkly with the fag-puffing, beer-swilling crowds at home.
  • She scrambled to her feet and ran coltishly past him and over the bridge, hiding her face and calling gaily, "Come on! The Judge
  • They dumped their BMX bikes and scrambled over a fence to launch the merciless attack. The Sun
  • The orthography is doubtful, but there is little question that a kind of bramble-bush is intended. ANF01. The Apostolic Fathers with Justin Martyr and Irenaeus
  • Getting dressed on the side of a logging road with no real place to park, we scramble to get our clothes on, gear stashed and snowshoes lashed to our boots before the first crazed logger sweeps around the corner in his big rig.
  • In excursions of this kind it is customary to "hobble" the horses; that is, to tie their fore-legs together, so that they cannot run either fast or far, but are free enough to amble about with a clumsy sort of hop in search of food. The Dog Crusoe and his Master
  • The gambler bought off the police and thus was able to operate freely.
  • Sorters had to unscramble a moving target, while tests had to resist a moving arrow.
  • Two years ago he went there for the Seniors Open with his emotions scrambled.
  • Please note that you cannot drive around Loch Katrine, but if you fancy a long country stroll, you can ramble right round the perimeter, and I doubt if there is a lovelier walk anywhere in Britain.
  • Everything was in shambles, set alight with fire and misted by smoke.
  • The journey is a leisurely scenic amble along the Italian coast. Times, Sunday Times
  • An army bomb squad was scrambled to dispose of an unexploded mortar shell found poking out of a rabbit hole on Easter Sunday.
  • Without preamble, the soldiers drew up and shot them.
  • Cockfighting, also known as "cocking," is a bloodsport that dates to colonial times in the United States and has offered gamblers a venue for betting around the world. Cracking Down on Cockfighting
  • The thicker scrub and thickets of elder, hawthorn and bramble, meanwhile, provide ideal cover for nesting robins, wrens, sparrows, dunnocks, blackbirds and thrushes.
  • This was more in the character of the Irish itinerant gambler, called in that country a ` ` carrow, '' than of the Scottish beggar. The Antiquary
  • A few years ago, Fremont Street was choked with cars, cabs, exhaust fumes and even a few gamblers.
  • Flood defence experts are to give householders in the Hambleton area advice on how to protect their homes from inundation.
  • He uses terms like commensalism and epiphyte, and primary and secondary forest, and crepuscular; and our brains scramble to keep up. Valerie Tarico: Madagascar: West Knows Best
  • The wine is very juicy with ripe berry fruit, brambles, a sprinkling of spice and round tannins.
  • The lowdown: Cyrus Garza (Jimmy Smits) isn't your typical Supreme Court justice; he gambles, womanizes, and has a more public persona than any justice has ever had. Inside TV Blog

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