[ UK /tɹˈe‍ɪps/ ]
[ US /ˈtɹeɪps/ ]
VERB
  1. walk or tramp about
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How To Use traipse In A Sentence

  • And they all traipsed out for another round of triangular sandwiches with the crusts cut off and a wee cup of tea served in the best china.
  • A quick traipse around the site reveals it's no hoax, parody or spoof.
  • We traipsed all over town looking for a copy of the book.
  • Post column, Will took on George H.W. Bush, saying: "The unpleasant sound Bush is emitting as he traipses from one conservative gathering to another is a thin, tinny 'arf'-the sound of a lap dog. CampusProgress.org
  • Wrapped in a towel, dripping water onto the sea-grass, I traipse to the kitchen and switch on the kettle. CHAMELEON
  • One dancer's traipse over a billowing canopy suggested a walk on the moon; another's gymnastics under running water was both dreamlike and unsettling.
  • But this week, to my amazement, a man of perhaps Arab origin stood on the left, blocking the traipse of climbers.
  • Kaulback has watched all sorts of wildlife traipse across his yard over the nearly 50 years he's lived in Des Plaines.
  • I thought of Kawaramachi Street where gangs of pigeon-toed teenagers traipsed up and down in Doc Martins and tartan mini-skirts.
  • Lillian would have traipsed off with him, he knew, to Florida or Arizona, or maybe to one of those southeastern states like North Carolina. AFFLICTION
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