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How To Use Barefoot In A Sentence

  • Even Larry, barefooted now, and with both hands tightly clenched, such was his wrought-up condition, stood and watched with burning eyes as the aeroplane sank lower and lower in its forward swoop. The Airplane Boys among the Clouds or, Young Aviators in a Wreck
  • They have innumerable beautiful, barefoot children, live in low-slung, thatched, whitewashed cottages, and their climate is often cool, damp and misty.
  • Jamaerah was barefoot, wearing only a pair of ragged stonewashed jeans, playing an invisible guitar to “Put Your Lights On,” rocking out while coffee brewed, singing his heart out in perfect pitch, wings spread, eyes closed, and an expression of sheer ecstasy gracing his beautiful face. Surrender the Dark
  • The men are dressed in shabby, quilted jackets; they are bareheaded and barefoot.
  • I'm in my running shorts and my T-shirt, and I'm barefooted.
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  • Barefoot and wiry, his leathered face looks older than his 29 years.
  • In summer they go barefoot, but seldom barelegged, as has been lately asserted by a traveller.
  • Among my favorites are the triumphant warrior Fortinbras represented by a pair of barefoot drips in angel costume, he blond and epicene, she a redheaded virago.
  • Try to avoid walking around barefoot in communal areas. The Sun
  • They were surrounded by hyenas, crocodiles and hippos and while in the swamps they went barefoot so they would feel a potentially deadly crocodile beneath their feet. The Sun
  • To study these reclusive animals, he wades barefoot through the swamps of Venezuela's llanos wetlands ecosystem in search of his water-dwelling subjects.
  • Some time about the year 1827, two sturdy lads, tall and well proportioned but clad in homespun and barefooted, came to "Dryden Corners" from the South Hill neighborhood, driving an ox team and bringing to market a wagon load of pine shingles which they had shaved by hand. Living in Dryden: June 2004 Archives
  • A study suggests that barefoot running may not be quite the joyful return to nature it is cracked up to be. Times, Sunday Times
  • Try to avoid walking around barefoot in communal areas. The Sun
  • It works for pottering around in barefoot at home or layered up with thermals, tights and a cardie for winter workdays.
  • She was barefoot and her patched yellow sunsuit was faded and worn. The Red Trailer Mystery
  • The sun is a bright Caribbean yellow, made even richer by the tropical blue sky, and even though it's only mid-morning, barefooted beachcombers weave along the water's edge to keep the soles of their feet cool.
  • Yelling at him to be patient, she clambered into a pair of brigga, pulled on a shirt, and ran barefooted to unbar the door and let him in. A TIME OF WAR
  • In recent years the trend of "barefooting" while running or doing other activities has become more popular. National Business News - Local Business News | bizjournals
  • If you need to move faster than you can walk barefoot, you hire a bicycle. Times, Sunday Times
  • Some of his hair was also burnt and his feet were swollen, the after effects of his barefooted trot out of the forest.
  • To find the snakes, he wades - barefoot - in the knee-deep water of the Venezuelan llanos, the lowland savannah that is flooded each year during rainy season.
  • A quick splash at the water's edge might seem like the best way to cool your tired feet when the sun's out – but chiropodist Fred Beaumont warns that if you go barefoot, it's something you could live to regret. The inside track ... on paddling
  • She was barefoot and carried on her back a corf half full of coal. A Place Called Freedom
  • The sun blazed down on all of us: friends, family, servants and a cluster of barefoot neighborhood kids.
  • I kicked them off and carried them, running barefooted down the road, not even noticing when my feet began to bleed from the rough road scraping them.
  • See that girl barefooting along Whistling and singing, she's a-carrying on Got laughing in her eyes Dancing in her feet She's a neon diamond She can live on the street Chorus Hey, hey, come right away Come and join the party Every day Hey, hey, come right away Come and join the party every day Well, everybody's dancing in a ring around the sun Nobody's finished, we ain't even begun So take off your shoes, child And take off your hat Try on your wings And find out where it's at The WELL: The Golden Road (To Unlimited Devotion)
  • Why does he go around barefoot? Times, Sunday Times
  • Walking in the snow barefoot for a few minutes made my toes feel dead.
  • Playing barefoot football was a matter of choice as football boots were available and not too costly. Times, Sunday Times
  • Lang's final encore last night was "Barefoot".
  • Wide heels increase peak external knee flexor torque by 30 % in comparison to going barefoot.
  • They refuse her every wish - to wear plain, plaid dresses instead of fussy white muslin, to go barefoot outdoors, and to have second helpings of food.
  • Running barefoot is the future - it encourages better biomechanical form, apparently. The Sun
  • Walking in the snow barefoot for a few minutes made my toes feel dead.
  • Horses drawing carts clip-clop along the unsurfaced roads and gypsy children run barefoot in hot pursuit.
  • While a few hardy folks are truly running barefoot, most of us opt for minimalist footwear. The Sun
  • Hundreds of skinny, barefooted, dust-covered imps beg outsiders for money, pens and sweets - the adults are a little more reticent.
  • She is beyond beautiful barefoot in a white gown that discloses the lace of a cerise brassiere. S.X. Rosenstock: Sade at Honda Center: Style as Enlightenment
  • Go barefoot towards the island, following the poles of the ancient pilgrim path across the sands. Times, Sunday Times
  • But the king came to a better frame of mind, he called the jarls away, and returning humbly to his palace, took off his royal robes, and came again barefoot and in sackcloth to the church door, where Bishop William met him, took him by the hand, gave him the kiss of peace, and led him to the penitents 'place. A Book of Golden Deeds
  • It works for pottering around in barefoot at home or layered up with thermals, tights and a cardie for winter workdays.
  • The men are dressed in shabby, quilted jackets; they are bareheaded and barefoot.
  • Would she ever again pad across the grass, barefoot in her bikini?
  • When he was old enough John ran barefoot with his brothers to the hedge-school, then the sole means of instruction for Catholic peasant children, who on fine days conned their lessons in a dry ditch under a hedge, and in wet weather were gathered into a rough barn. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
  • At the entrance, a life-size sculpture of a barefoot, shirtless man lay on a row of empty birdcages.
  • You walk around barefoot five times a day. Times, Sunday Times
  • At Hannah's bidding, I fly downstairs barefoot and beg Mr. Hakim to get us one of his mini cabs When I return, I find her standing at the rickety wardrobe, holding my shoulder-bag which has evidently slipped from its hiding place in the rush but not, thank Heaven, my precious copy of J'Accuse! The mission song
  • Our son found his way into a disused cesspit and then, going barefoot, picked up an infection, which required regular injections in his backside.
  • It is never quiet, and cool guys and gals walk with an energetic gait while window-shopping, relaxed in casual dress, some of them even walking barefoot.
  • A strange barefooted slide across the floor is required and my feet keep sticking.
  • In Chelsea Manhattan, two weeks before Halloween, white powdered, barefoot Beings in saffron skirts and robes moving on crystal sand escort us to our essence where we are quiet; grace reigns (rains). Jack Schimmelman: Sankai Juku (studio by the mountain and the sea)
  • From the mountainous piles of refuse, of "culm," barefooted children, nearly as black as their miner fathers, were tramping homeward with burdens of coal that they had gleaned from the waste. Derrick Sterling A Story of the Mines
  • The style is barefoot sophistication and ideal for honeymooners, escapists and divers, with an excellent dive school and some of the best underwater scenery in the Caribbean just offshore.
  • Except, perhaps, for the inclusion of the dance's peat-covered stage, strikingly filmed here as it's being put in place, there seems little about this Sturm und Drang battle of the sexes for barefoot women in thin slips and bare-chested, barefoot men in black slacks that trendy French modernist Maurice Béjart or any number of earnest modern-dance practitioners might not have done. A Posthumous Spotlight on a Force of Nature
  • There was also consternation at measures allowing police to go barefoot and even shirtless in stations.
  • A moth flies by, wings beating slowly as though it were a bird; then a woman, barefoot in a long gown, appears to swim upward in defiance of gravity.
  • The blinds were always down, and her barefooted tribe was never permitted to enter the sacred precinct save on state occasions. Chapter 23
  • The baron, shivering barefooted, pulled out his watch. CHAPTER 24
  • He also noted that the first raindrop that hits the ground will have those cars aquaplaning like barefoot water-skiers.
  • Old-timers recall barefoot children scampering into the woods to hide when the first cars rattled into their villages in the 1950s. Oil Spill Threatens Way Of Life For American-Indian Fishing Villages
  • They all walked barefoot across the damp sand to the water's edge.
  • A study suggests that barefoot running may not be quite the joyful return to nature it is cracked up to be. Times, Sunday Times
  • She was wearing a rather grubby and patched brown dress and was barefoot.
  • I won't drag you through a turgid technical history of the sneaker including waffles, bubbles, air cushioning, antipronation, supination, orthotics and barefoot technology. The Great Sneaker Revival
  • I can see occasionally going sockless, even barefoot. Generation Sock
  • Of course, the rest of the nation — or, perhaps, most of it — was laughing at the Cowboys, hoping they'd plunge to 0-16 and owner Jerry Jones wound be found, like Dickens's Miss Havisham, wandering his $1.1 billion stadium barefoot in tailored Neiman Marcus pajamas, muttering gibberish about Tex Schramm and the NFL's collective bargaining agreement. In Dallas, Stars Are Again Aligned
  • He did not sleep; but something short of a dream came into his alert and wakeful mind some while before dawn, as though the sun was rising before its hour, a warmth like a May morning full of blown hawthorn blossoms, and a girl, primrose-fair and unshorn, walking barefoot through the meadow grass, and smiling. A River So Long
  • This leads to calf muscles contracting, making it very difficult to stand with your feet flat, even when barefoot.
  • Barefoot and with hair unkempt, hippies paid 9p to stay on rooftops in the old town. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was a world-penance for a world to see, and paltry indeed it made appear that earlier penance, barefooted in the snow, of an emperor to a pope for daring to squabble over temporal power. Goliah
  • The blast at the Sunubar Hotel sent frightened guests of the three-storey hotel running into the street, some barefooted, others with bloodstains on their clothes.
  • And a third have walked home barefoot because of the discomfort. Times, Sunday Times
  • A few minutes later a barefooted native girl padded in and shook her head. THE PROUD GOAT OFALOYSIUS PANKBURN
  • It was uncomfortable walking barefoot on the shingly beach.
  • He is a mature, barefoot, and bearded man in archaic costume, the toga sine tunica, which leaves most of his chest and right shoulder and arm bare.
  • “Along a road in Matabeleland, barefoot children stuff their pockets with corn kernels that have blown off a truck as if the brownish bits, good only for animal feed in normal times, were gold coins,” reads this New York Times story on a stark situation in which “the half-starved haunt the once bountiful landscape of Zimbabwe, where a recent United Nations survey found that 7 in 10 people had eaten either nothing or only a single meal the day before.” 2009 February 02 « Scavenging
  • I wore a white dress and was barefoot.
  • We took off our shoes and socks and walked barefoot along the beach.
  • I prefer to go barefoot, but I have trainers, high heeled mules, loafers and flipflops.
  • He says my feet are already nice and hard from going barefoot all the time. A Plague of Angels
  • No bunch of teenyboppers was going to keep me from enjoying the latest adventures of my favorite barefooted, mussy-haired, possibly autistic detective, no sir. I did miss Iron Chef: A review of Death Note: L, Change the WorLd | Robot 6 @ Comic Book Resources – Covering Comic Book News and Entertainment
  • Barefoot and with hair unkempt, hippies paid 9p to stay on rooftops in the old town. Times, Sunday Times
  • The beach garland is sunburned, a silt shopworn, hot, as well as full of waste -- no place for upon foot barefoot. Archive 2009-11-01
  • His tears of joy mix with sweat as he does a barefoot dance, to the delight of a mostly African crowd that numbers in the hundreds.
  • After training barefoot on yoga mats, players had to adjust to matches in shoes. Times, Sunday Times
  • When his sectioning was renewed, Henry would scratch his arms, bang his head against the wall, go barefoot, refuse to wear underclothes, and then, just as we were despairing, he would rally and become calmer and more rational. Henry’s Demons
  • Some archers wore virtually no defensive equipment and were even barefoot, carrying perhaps a small buckler as well as a sword, dagger, or lead maul.
  • Sometimes a walk around the pond is actually a barefoot wade through the pond. Too drunk to get drunk: an amateur naturalist reports
  • It was uncomfortable walking barefoot on the shingly beach.
  • They would then halt, go aside and put on their shoes, while their barefooted gallants, with tow and cotton shirts and "britches," stood in the road till their return. Fisher's River (North Carolina) Scenes and Characters
  • You was barehead, barefoot; you run away from home. The song of the lark
  • A lot of people are chasing returns in barefoot banking. Microfinance Fever
  • Go barefoot towards the island, following the poles of the ancient pilgrim path across the sands. Times, Sunday Times
  • I slid my boots off of my now callused feet, how many times had I trained barefooted in that sandy arena with Master Lin!
  • It must have been near the end of school for I was already walking barefoot, something that my father, the local country doctor, looked on with disfavor.
  • It will be noticed, that the retainers guarding the exterior and entrance are barefooted, which is a mark of respect in honour of the rank of the culprit, and of the solemnity of the occasion. Sketches of Japanese Manners and Customs
  • The most curious thing about these three girls were that they were all wearing pants, and were barefooted.
  • I stood barefoot on the dirt road, sludge and rain quickly filling the potholes pockmarking it. Crescendo
  • Even as a child, he walked barefoot on the path full of thorns of hardship and austerity.
  • We explored, we gazed a bit more, and I discovered the pleasures of walking barefoot on marble.
  • They were surrounded by hyenas, crocodiles and hippos and while in the swamps they went barefoot so they would feel a potentially deadly crocodile beneath their feet. The Sun
  • I hung out with a guy who had spent ten years walking barefoot around America. Times, Sunday Times
  • Children go barefoot, while their parents wear rubber thongs or sandals.
  • You walk around barefoot five times a day. Times, Sunday Times
  • Many people go barefoot, or wear flip-flops or plastic sandals.
  • Older inhabitants still remember running around barefoot through the snow. THE EARTH: An Intimate History
  • You can recharge even faster if you take your shoes and socks off and walk barefoot through the grass.
  • Then they barefoot a back-arching skim on to a spirit-level pond.
  • At the cliff Mitchell hung a towel on a sea-grape branch and scaled barefoot down the rocks to the colorless water.
  • `Are we supposed to stand barefoot on ice while we rummage through a bunch of stinking old shoes? THE BROKEN GOD
  • Then next-door neighbour Mark Stringfellow, 32, went on the roof barefooted and pulled Paul, 15, out of the converted loft, leading him across to the safety of his own home.
  • He did not merely walk barefoot in the pine needles, but dug his toes in so that they ploughed a shallow furrow.
  • Kicking off the bedclothes, he began to pace the room, barefoot.
  • He was barefoot, and if the term sans-culottes wasn't yet in common use, it wasn't for lack of trying on his part. Dragonfly in Amber
  • Yet her body longed so sore for the springtide freshness of the grass, and was so bewooed of the flowery scent thereof, that though she durst not go unarmed, she did off her footgear and went stealing softly barefoot and with naked legs over the embroidered greensward, saying aloud to herself: If run for the ferry I needs must, lighter shall I run so dight. The Water of the Wondrous Isles
  • A MISSING property mogul has been found starving and barefoot on a country road eight months after vanishing. The Sun
  • She dirties her hands and feet, splashes paint onto her skin or pinches it with clothespins, squeezes herself into cupboards and detached fireplace moldings, wraps herself in tattered wallpaper peeling from the walls, crouches barefoot amongst the dust and detritus and reclines in display cases alongside taxidermied rodents. Larissa Archer: Artist Unbound: Francesca Woodman at SFMOMA
  • If she bid them they will go barefoot to Jerusalem, to the great Cham's court, [5452] to the East Indies, to fetch her a bird to wear in her hat: and with Drake and Candish sail round about the world for her sweet sake, adversis ventis, serve twice seven years, as Jacob did for Rachel; do as much as [5453] Gesmunda, the daughter of Anatomy of Melancholy
  • And yes, some poor group will get trapped in snowfall when crossing the pass, and cannibalism may or may not be involved by the time they stumble barefoot from the mountains next spring. Boing Boing
  • Five barefooted girls in pajamas made their way across the street with flashlights in hand.
  • Bent like vultures, and with limbs akimbo, the dancers perform barefoot or in heavy shoes.
  • But it takes real talent to bring out the artless charm and simple wisdom of a babbling, barefoot and pregnant hick, whose only wish in life is to have her high school sweetheart love her the way he did when they were just teens.
  • In the second bowl is water for the guest to wash his or her feet; a reminder that in India people walked barefoot.
  • Jim, arriving just too late to save his own, promptly "collared" those of Wally, leaving the last-named youth no alternative but to paddle home in the water-logged slippers – the ground being too rough and stony to admit of barefoot travelling. A Little Bush Maid
  • I wore a white dress and was barefoot.
  • Sharp stones on the path made walking barefoot rather uncomfortable.
  • She liked the parks, she liked the trams, she liked our walks, barefoot on the beach; she liked our long breakfasts in my wild garden, during which she never had enough of watching the rosellas quarrelling over breadcrumbs.
  • Police are looking for a barefooted bandit after a heavily disguised man robbed a golf club last night.
  • Most, actually, were barefoot and clad only in cotton hospital gowns, their stringy hair clinging lankly to their foreheads.
  • On the left side of the panel, two barefoot attendants approach the altar, clad in short tunics and wearing laurel wreaths.
  • I turned to look and saw Ellyn, standing tall and barefoot in the sand, dressed in flowing white robes inlaid with golden filigree, and a spear as tall as she was planted in the sand beside her.
  • Joan comes downstairs barefoot in her pajamas, to tell her aunt, comfily watching TV and reading on the couch, that she can't sleep.
  • As is the custom in Indian vernacular architecture, Barefoot College courtyards are highly decorated at ground level.
  • The first one mounted the runway and briskly walked its length, barefoot on the nail points.
  • I know people who are doing what they can to approximate running barefoot by running in shoes such as Vibram Five Fingers, but except for people who run on a beach somewhere I personally don't know of anyone who runs on the road, or on a treadmill even, without anything on their feet. Blogtimore, Hon
  • Also, stomping all over the place in your street shoes where others tread barefoot is a health hazard.
  • Alan came running barefoot through the house.
  • The slow, dismal tolling of bells; the masked and muffled familiars; the Dominicans carrying their horrid flag, followed by the penitents behind a huge cross; the condemned ones, barefoot, clad in painted caps and the repulsive sanbenito; next the effigies of accused offenders who had escaped by flight; then, the bones of dead culprits in black coffins painted with flames and other hellish symbols; and, finally, the train closing with a host of priests and monks. The Destiny of the Soul A Critical History of the Doctrine of a Future Life
  • Not only did he not wear pants, and was barefooted and barelegged, but about his middle, just like any black, he wore a brilliant-coloured loin-cloth, that, like a kilt, fell nearly to his sunburnt knees. CHAPTER II
  • After a barefoot wander across the soft lawns, we go in search of culinary pleasures. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was still wearing his shoes, which made obvious clips and clops on the stone-tiled road, while his creator was barefoot.
  • He is a '60s renegade not afraid to use a corny word like "jeepers," and he displayed a ripe sense of humor about some of his younger antics - he once attended a press tour barefoot (although the suit was bespoke and the tie Hermes). Chicagotribune.com -
  • I was a good sprinter and often represented my school at interschool meets - and always ran barefoot. There was a time...
  • Claiming that going barefoot is better because our ancestors did it is as valid as saying that wearing shoes is better because we've been doing it since prehistory. - Boing Boing
  • They leave their homes, some barefoot, to join icy, sometimes untrodden trails through the Himalayas that line the border of the Tibet Autonomous Region of China and Nepal.
  • The sun blazed down on all of us: friends, family, servants and a cluster of barefoot neighborhood kids.
  • Pushing the plate away from his foot, he padded barefoot up to Ronnie's bathroom.
  • As we drove north, we passed villages of broken clapboard shacks, mud-caked barefoot children and the occasional stray chicken.
  • He made each of his players run barefoot over red-hot coals.
  • Playing barefoot football was a matter of choice as football boots were available and not too costly. Times, Sunday Times
  • They were surrounded by hyenas, crocodiles and hippos and while in the swamps they went barefoot so they would feel a potentially deadly crocodile beneath their feet. The Sun
  • Music is the bridge between the old Italian saloon singer and the barefoot Canadian songbird.
  • Whether through ‘jazzy’ movement or a blend of ballet and modem, whether with extravagant sets or a bare stage with barefoot dancers, you may not recognize jazz dance when you see it, but you'll know it when you feel it.
  • The dwarves were a sorry sight, bereft of their weapons, most of them barefoot. The Doom Brigade
  • While I'll normally take the opportunity to kick sand in the face of any barefooted protester blocking my way into the supermarket, I have to admit that Busby commands my respect.
  • In the winter, reasons for socklessness included feeling more relaxed with unconstrained feet, just being in the habit of it, and just liking being barefoot. Summer holidays, or the lack thereof, in Japan
  • It would be hard, for example, for someone playing Bottom (John Ramm, in this case) to preen and swagger, when showing off his hammy acting, if he is barefoot, as was the entire cast here.
  • Ordeal by fire required suspects (usually freemen) to carry hot irons, or to walk blindfold and barefoot through red-hot ploughshares or over heated coals.
  • I began to walk barefooted on the soft mossy ground.
  • She was barefooted, as Eppie always was except on Sundays, and wore a coarse, gray wincey dress and a big apron. 'Lizbeth of the Dale
  • The barefoot young Tunisian fitted in as yet another holidaymaker. Times, Sunday Times
  • For those curious to try barefoot running but leery of Tulsa's bumpy roads, a company called Vibram has a solution: its FiveFingers running shoes. Undefined
  • One instance each of the following words was retained: barefooted/bare-footed whitleather/whit-leather The Citizen-Soldier or, Memoirs of a Volunteer
  • He remembers how carefree she appeared, often walking about braless and barefoot and without bodyguards. Times, Sunday Times
  • He says he goes shoeless practically all the time - even in the winter, when he's been known to shovel snow barefoot.
  • We bushwhack -- not barefoot -- over muddy streams and up through the tangle of vines and limbs, to the place where Marina waits. Valerie Tarico: Madagascar: West Knows Best
  • He scrapped segregated dining rooms and often walked around barefoot and in casual dress, eating bananas.
  • All of the exterior scenes were filmed in the middle of the night and I was barefoot.
  • Barefoot’, a fascinating space (you can't call it a shop) with its range of durries, spreads, cushions, sarongs and innumerable knick-knacks will mesmerise you.
  • It works for pottering around in barefoot at home or layered up with thermals, tights and a cardie for winter workdays.
  • He says my feet are already nice and hard from going barefoot all the time. A Plague of Angels
  • Myrtle Beach is often called the golfing capital of the world, and it was the intracoastal island golfing community of Barefoot Resort, where the Swartzes live, that sustained much of the damage. Undefined
  • I'm tired of walking through scanners barefoot and beltless. Carrie Pollare: I'm Tired of... Flying!
  • Rows of barefoot men sat cross-legged on the floor as their young sons fidgeted next to them.
  • And Billy dances off again in newer glee, while the inspired musician is plunking a banjo imitation on his enchanted instrument, which is unceremoniously drowned out by a circus-tune from Doc that is absolutely inspiring to every one but the barefooted brother, who drops back listlessly to his old position on the floor and sullenly renews operations on his "chigger" claims. The Complete Works of James Whitcomb Riley, Volume 10
  • This condition is very infectious, so do not walk around barefoot where other people are likely to tread or allow sharing of thongs, sandals, or towels.
  • We'd put our wooden clogs inside our jackets and sneak out the back barefooted so that O-Sensei would not notice.
  • It was my eight-year-old son Nathan, standing barefoot in the freshly tilled soil, his hands blackened from digging in the earth. Chicken Soup for the Soul: Thanks Dad
  • He had a good scratch through his stubble before padding barefoot into the kitchen. FALLEN WOMEN
  • One Response to “Stepping barefoot on an earthworm” moggy Says: Stepping barefoot on an earthworm
  • Why does he go around barefoot? Times, Sunday Times
  • And a third have walked home barefoot because of the discomfort. Times, Sunday Times
  • And you've seen barefoot children being shooed out of a shopping mall by security guards.
  • Surveyors, trudging barefoot through the mud, stuck flags into the soggy earth marking the city limits.
  • If you need to move faster than you can walk barefoot, you hire a bicycle. Times, Sunday Times
  • With a cloth over his mouth to prevent his breath from inhaling any airborne creature, he spent the following nine years as a wandering, barefoot mendicant.
  • Going barefoot or wearing sandals or thongs can also cause PF.
  • He studied the gait of those who walk barefoot over long distances on uneven surfaces - like the Masai people of East Africa - and found they rarely suffered from back or joint problems.
  • She'll very soon go barefoot! The Tales of Beatrix Potter
  • Barefoot, barelegged, and with her dress sleeves rolled up to the elbows, Josie had come along way from her strict and proper ways at Hatfield.
  • She re-taught herself to feel the vibration of the sounds, registering pitch and tone through the buzz of her body, often playing barefoot.
  • In addition, when labors operate electric equipments, they commonly don't wear helmet and are barebacked, barefoot and without any safe protection.
  • To show their enthusiasm for the corporate team, the employees were asked to engage in the ritual of fire-walking - literally to walk barefooted across a bed of white-hot coals.
  • The frost was working out of the ground, and out of the air, too, and it was getting closer and closer onto barefoot time every day; and next it would be marble time, and next mumbletypeg, and next tops and hoops, and next kites, and then right away it would be summer and going in a-swimming. Tom Sawyer, Detective
  • The only other things the monk might have were a pendant cross and a pair of shoes or sandals, although some went barefoot as a lifelong penance.
  • After training barefoot on yoga mats, players had to adjust to matches in shoes. Times, Sunday Times
  • She remembers clomping alongside her on a walk across the park, Sharon in ugly Clarks shoes, her mother, barefoot and wearing a slinky catsuit zipped down to her navel. Lorna Sage, my mum
  • For barefoot boys as young as four in tatty shirts, to turbaned men in their sixties, football is a passion.
  • The guys were still soundly sleeping when I crept out of my room in pajamas and with barefooted feet and headed upstairs to work on my hopefully perfect plan.

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