How To Use Perambulate In A Sentence
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Unlike the Tuilleries, the Luxembourg is where Parisians go to perambulate.
What to Do in Paris / Que faire a Paris? - French Word-A-Day
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The men of the Company stood on parade while their officers perambulated.
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According to traditions, the selectmen are required by law to perambulate the bounds every five years.
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And she perambulated around the outside of the house, investigating, looking to see if windows and shutters were secure and in order.
The Awakening
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John Aubrey, the antiquary, who "perambulated" Surrey in
Highways and Byways in Surrey
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Occupied all day with matters of vast moment, deeply anxious about the fate of the greatest army of the world, with his own fame and future hanging on the events of the passing hour, he yet has such a wealth of simple bonhommie and goodfellowship, that he gets out of bed and perambulates the house in his shirt to find us that we may share with him the fun.
The Five of Hearts
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While healthy elephants can trudge long distances in search of water, "weak and sick" animals are unable to "perambulate" and succumb, says forest veterinarian Dr N.S. Manoharan.
The Earth Times Online Newspaper
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He responded with a litany of places been and people seen and red carpets perambulated, of yachts boarded and eminent names placed next to him at fancy dinners.
Resurrected by the Wrath of Liz Smith
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According to traditions, the selectmen are required by law to perambulate the bounds every five years.
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Mother with her toddler perambulated the infant in tow.
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Occupied all day with matters of vast moment, deeply anxious about the fate of the greatest army of the world, with his own fame and future hanging on the events of the passing hour, he yet has such a wealth of simple bonhommie and goodfellowship, that he gets out of bed and perambulates the house in his shirt to find us that we may share with him the fun.
The Five of Hearts
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As I perambulated, I noticed a fellow mount a department store mountain bike in front of a restaurant and then ride away.
BSNYC Firday Fun Quiz!
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He rotch 'down, an' he raise 'up de pumpkin, an' he perambulate 'right quick to he ma's shack, an' he lift 'up de latch, an' he open 'de do', an 'he yenter' in.
Humorous Ghost Stories
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The spatial character of architectural mnemonics — that one would "perambulate" cloisters and palaces in the mind, composing narratives with the ornaments and images arrayed therein — reflects a phenomenological dimension to thought that may be quite foreign to a modern-day observer.
Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro
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When I had perambulated the length and breadth of the classes, M. Pelet turned and said to me — “Would you object to taking the boys as they are, and testing their proficiency in English?”
The Professor, by Charlotte Bronte
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The duke perambulated the boundary of his estate.
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Then again, I'm positively balmy myself, so I was prepared to perambulate with a pack of pinniped pals.
Jerry Zezima: "Seals of Approval"
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Over the weekend I had a chance to perambulate properly in cyberspace.
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Unspoken but understood was that we wanted a community small enough to perambulate but that also had DSL.
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From my own experience of reading parties, I should select as their peculiar characteristics, a tendency to hats and caps of such remarkable shapes, as, if once sported in the college quadrangle, would be the subject of a common-room _instanter_; and, among some individuals (whom we may call the peripatetic philosophers of the party) a predilection for seedy shooting-coats and short pipes, with which they perambulate the neighbourhood to the marvel of the aboriginal inhabitants; while those whom we may class with the stoics, display a preference for dressing-gowns and meerschaums, and confine themselves principally to the doorways and open windows of their respective lodgings.
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 54, No. 334, August 1843
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Selectmen are required by law to perambulate the bounds every five years
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Our adventurer expected to see in Mr Jacobs a withered and filthy old being, similar in external appearance to those of his race who then perambulated the metropolis as dealers in cast-off clothing.
Ralph Rashleigh
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Unlike the Tuilleries, the Luxembourg is where Parisians go to perambulate.
What to Do in Paris / Que faire a Paris? - French Word-A-Day
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But for many of us, pedestrians are the major threat, particularly when they perambulate in an iPod bubble.
Two Wheels that Tame Your City
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According to traditions, the selectmen are required by law to perambulate the bounds every five years.
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I find myself having to tell my students to unlearn this tendency by, among others, asking them to throw their thesaurus away, especially when the only reason they turn to it is to find a fancier word for something as basic as “talk” (expostulate?) or “walk” (perambulate?)
Archive 2010-03-01
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Go on, now: bust a move, or whatever it is you homeboys do to help you perambulate.
The Whisperers
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No, to perambulate this terraqueous globe is too small a range; were it permitted, he should at least make the tour of the whole system of the sun.
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The added handicap is that runners have to dodge the horse dung as they perambulate down the track.
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In my Virginia hometown, people perambulated when they could not drive at a pace somewhere between a saunter and a stroll.
The Infuriating Smartphone Saunter
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Stupid is the stripling who perambulates with swicidal swordswomen.
Archive 2008-03-01
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As the crowd perambulated among the hellebores and hostas, enjoying the plentiful supplies of champagne and canapes and admiring the elegant garden furniture and sculpture on sale, musicians played.
They Must Think Cabbages, Not Carats
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It was a grassy, briery, moist defile, affording some shelter to any person who had sought it; but the party perambulated it in vain, and ascended on the other side.
Wessex Tales
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Corporation, preceded by Sword-bearer, Beadles, and Blue Coat School boys, going in procession from one city boundary-stone to another, across the meadows and the river, or over hedges and gardens, or anything else to which the perambulated border-line took them.
The Child and Childhood in Folk-Thought Studies of the Activities and Influences of the Child Among Primitive Peoples, Their Analogues and Survivals in the Civilization of To-Day
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He rotch down, an 'he raise up de pumpkin, an' he perambulate right quick to he ma's shack, an 'he lift up de latch, an' he open de do ', an' he yenter in.
The Boy Scouts Book of Campfire Stories
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The duke perambulated the boundary of his estate.
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The narrow opening supported a child's body and encouraged children to perambulate by keeping them from sitting down or crawling.
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According to traditions, the selectmen are required by law to perambulate the bounds every five years.