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heavy-footed

ADJECTIVE
  1. (of movement) lacking ease or lightness
    his tired heavy-footed walk

How To Use heavy-footed In A Sentence

  • `That's easy to say, but heavy-footed probing can be terribly dangerous. MIDNIGHT IS A LONELY PLACE
  • He can be made to look a bit heavy-footed in defence, at times even slow.
  • Out here, just because the government says something is true doesn't make it so, and the heavy-footed federal presence during the five-year manhunt didn't help matters.
  • Development of the worldwide web carries on at such a pace that heavy-footed government can never keep up.
  • Over time, however, the ocean - and heavy-footed climbers - steadily wore away the surrounding cliffs.
  • The two fine goals against Denmark were a proper reward, but he terrorised the heavy-footed German defence too.
  • The trio's heavy-footed Krautrock drumbeat was met by a winsome sitar, earning it a place on this compilation of obscurities four decades later. Derek Beres: Global Beat Fusion: Rediscovering Legacies in India, Thailand and Indonesia
  • No less relevant is that it is much more difficult, when he is picked in the midfield, for opponents to play on the fact that he can be a little slow and heavy-footed on the turn.
  • The ballad ‘Angel’ is earthy and heavy-footed, but has a tired grace that rescues it from what could've become cement shoes.
  • his tired heavy-footed walk
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