[
US
/təˈbɑɡən/
]
[ UK /təbˈɒɡən/ ]
[ UK /təbˈɒɡən/ ]
NOUN
- a long narrow sled without runners; boards curve upward in front
VERB
- move along on a luge or toboggan
How To Use toboggan In A Sentence
- The actress let out a scream as she tobogganed down a hill at the ski resort of Banff in Alberta, Canada.
- White-suited drivers, wearing straw hats and Madeiran boots, run alongside, pushing the toboggan to gain momentum.
- The toboggan consists of a wide wicker basket with a cushioned seat, set on wooden runners.
- After the accident, the ski patrol was called, and she was taken off the hill in a toboggan, which is standard protocol, according to reports. George Loper's Website
- Never before captured on film, we witness majestic sliding, an epic fight for toboggan territory and the unique mating ritual of this rare icon of the Canadian Prairie.
- Looked past the kitchen, at the hall to the bedroom where she'd paused Amy's slow-motion Fentanyl toboggan. ABSOLUTE ZERO
- Your ramble is up the toboggan path and down by the stream through the pinewoods. CHALLENGE FOR THE CHALET SCHOOL
- Both places were full of titled guests invited (or commanded, rather) by Kralta, and we drove in sleighs and skated and tobogganed and revelled by evening and pleasured by night, and it was Vienna in the Arctic, with the Prince always on hand, bland and affable as ever with his popsies around him (one of 'em a new bird, an Italian, who'd replaced the garrulous blonde, no doubt on Kralta's orders) and it was all such enormous fun that I was heartily sick of it. Watershed
- And the image of a man being slurped on a moving toboggan by a pesky dog is too cartoonishly good to be true - unless the reader realizes how much universal Lab behavior is immortalized here.
- Then, my daughter slid off the toboggan head first into a snow bank, and when I pulled her out she took from her mouth her first missing tooth.