byroad

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

  • Watch the horses!" screeches a woman in a leather skirt as the two boys run along the rough stones of the byroad. The Towers of the Sunset
  • Before reaching his height, he had to take numerous byroads and make many aberrant deviations, conceal himself in multiple hiding places and under multiple masks: for example, that of a philologist.
  • He knew all the byroads in the plantation areas.
  • As more and more Indian and Pakistani businesses opened along Oak Tree Road and its byroads, parking became a contentious issue.
  • But this traffic jam was unlike what thousands of motorists experience everyday, as these cars were now only replicas of what they once were, when they travelled the byroads and highroads of the North West.
  • The Signal Section went astray and remained silently on a byroad while their officer reconnoitred. Adventures of a Despatch Rider
  • Ducking into the lanes and byroads whenever the urchins got hold of him was no permanent solution.
  • Advocating that candidates basically get out and wear down shoe leather on the high roads and byroads over the next three-and-a-half months, he claimed the organisation is a part of every community in the country.
  • This appears to be an obvious reference to the need for road users to go round the potholes - the byroad in question is adjacent to a network of roundabouts on the Laois / Carlow border.
  • After traipsing around the byroads in Knockleigha, peering over a few fences and clambering into a few ditches, the safari was beginning to look like a non-event.
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