bypath

NOUN
  1. a side road little traveled (as in the countryside)
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How To Use bypath In A Sentence

  • This way of thinking is illustrated as he commits what he calls a ‘literary sin’: In this matter of writing, resolve as one may to keep to the main road, some bypaths have an enticement not readily to be withstood.
  • When they came to the fork of the road, his horse turned left into a bypath as if it were possessed with a demon and began to run headlong down the hill.
  • The bypath of it is the entrance of this park.
  • No other single work furnishes such comprehensive and particular guidance to the spreading landscapes, the highways and bypaths of English Literature.
  • In this, it seems to me, we should agree with these skeptical anti-realists and knowledge microscopists of today: their instinct, which repels them from modern reality, is unrefuted - what do their retrograde bypaths concern us!
  • Any owner or person in charge of such dog being walked upon any common thoroughfare, sidewalk, street, gutter, beach, passageway, bypath, play area, park, public school grounds, or place where people congregate, must have in their possession their cleanup device and nonabsorbent, leak proof container.
  • ‘They burn incense to worthless gods and they have stumbled from their ways, from the ancient paths to walk in bypaths, not on a highway,’
  • When they came to the fork of the road, his horse turned left into a bypath as if it were possessed with a demon and began to run headlong down the hill.
  • We must get beyond textbooks, go out into the bypaths and untrodden depths of the wilderness and travel and explore and tell the world the glories of our journey.
  • Thus, a novel approach for the arrangement of bypaths is desired which enables increased, high speed operation.
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