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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.
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  • 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
  • Haydn, even if marginally heavy-footed, is always a party for your ears and woefully underrated in this country.
  • And visitors can be very heavy-footed when they're used to houses.
  • And I can hear the clump clump clump of the three posh post-university flatsharing chums thumping about their flat upstairs, slamming doors, shouting to each other and walking heavy-footed across my dream-flat.
  • A hypocritical, pompous, cowardly and sanctimonious bully, Carp makes his heavy-footed way through life completely blind to his own faults and acutely aware of the faults in others.
  • Actually he is not so much slow as a little heavy-footed.
  • Two squeaky-shoed and heavy-footed audience members demonstrated their passion for 20 th-century classical music by stomping out in the break after the first movement.
  • While Tanek was limping so heavily it was as if Valeska was watching a badger, ward the wolves away by its heavy-footed trot.
  • Such an unfocussed and scatter-gun assault is already pressing sympathetic buttons, and profiting from the usual heavy-footed public relations blundering of the municipal authorities, and the straight-man impressionability of patronizing editorialists. Conrad Black: My Manifesto For the Occupy Movement
  • He is too heavy-footed to handle speed, can't slide laterally and has to be conscious of his inside help.
  • David heard a series of thumps as the heavy-footed Cath made her way down and back up the basement stairs.
  • He stood up, thinking that he sounded like a caricature of a heavy-footed cop. LEFT, RIGHT AND CENTRE
  • Peter came heavy-footed up the stairs and then went into his bathroom down the corridor. THE WHITE DOVE
  • Movement is suggested less by the heavy-footed dancers than by the writhe and flamboyance of the composition.
  • A middle-aged woman with stiff, wood-colored curls all over her head was advancing on her, marching in heavy-footed determination.

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