bivouacking

[ UK /bˈɪvwɑːkɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the act of encamping and living in tents in a camp
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How To Use bivouacking In A Sentence

  • But I was afraid of bivouacking; we were soaking wet, had no sleeping bags, nothing dry or warm to change into and we were still at a high elevation. Richard Bangs: Climbing the Killer Prince -- Merapi Volcano of Java, Part 3
  • For me, the most fun part of climbing was bivouacking – getting up on a wall and sleeping in god-awful conditions, in hammocks, or just hanging from your ropes all night trying to sleep. '180° South: Conquerors of the Useless'
  • Frustrated and chagrined that they had been outfoxed yet again by the Comanches, the Fourth had no choice but to countermarch, bivouacking for the night at the site of the abandoned village.25 EMPIRE OF THE SUMMER MOON
  • But a new obstacle now arose in his troop; they had reckoned on a civic supper with their comrades of the guard; and the notion of bivouacking in front of the Abbaye, under the chilling wind and fierce showers which now swept down the dismal streets, was too much for their sense of discipline. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 55, No. 341, March, 1844
  • Spend two days working your way up the 22 pitches of the Lotus Flower Tower, bivouacking alongside a sea of granite after the first ten pitches.
  • While "bivouacking" a little behind this hill the enemy's skirmishers a little after dark made quite a determined onset on our Reminiscences of a soldier of the Orphan brigade,
  • Frustrated and chagrined that they had been outfoxed yet again by the Comanches, the Fourth had no choice but to countermarch, bivouacking for the night at the site of the abandoned village.25 EMPIRE OF THE SUMMER MOON
  • Pakistan troops train by bivouacking at high altitudes and conducting routine administrative activities and route marches.
  • He reminded Blanche that the previous summer, he, Remenyi, and another friend had gone horse-riding in the Alps, bivouacking most nights. SOMEWHERE EAST OF LIFE
  • They sell their trinkets, junk, cigarettes, DVDs, etc, to our guards and the Pakistani truck drivers bivouacking outside awaiting entrance onto the base.
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