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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
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  • 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
  • Our students would have to traipse all over the country to get this calibre of law school education in southern Canada.
  • Seeking a relatively low-price, low-key New Year's Eve celebration with the possibility of dancing, three of us traipsed down Fremont Avenue to a hip-hop show at Suite G.
  • He is certainly not the first celebrity chef to traipse over the border to celebrate the glories of Scottish food.
  • The police traipse through the house, the reporters destroy the gardens. RUNNING FROM THE LAW
  • Today, Igor still traipses through swamps - with me in tow - searching for black storks in the reserve, where we both volunteer part-time.
  • The police traipse through the house, the reporters destroy the gardens. RUNNING FROM THE LAW
  • As he traipsed off tugging his shirt, he looked a little unhappy.
  • No debit accounts then of course, just a traipse around the city collecting small bundles of fivers.
  • Few people have the time to traipse around galleries and exhibitions, while several works carry price tags that put them beyond the financial reach of mere mortals.
  • It seems to me that people would rather traipse round shops, gawping at potential purchases than they would educate themselves by looking at a book or work of art.
  • Deciding that they need some sort of food, they traipse off in the direction of the shop, still giggling to themselves.
  • I am too weak to traipse all the way there myself or I'd come with you. THE CALLIGRAPHER
  • The sepia tinted tableau is reminiscent of the opening, as a single file of prisoners traipse, gaunt and dirty, into the showers like animals to the slaughter.
  • They've shown initiative, intelligence and an acute awareness of what punters need as they traipse round the stands.
  • Those of us who've tried it know that it's quick and convenient and, much easier to search for bargains on the Net than it is to traipse from shop to shop looking for that special something.
  • I got to school and traipsed up the stairs to my form room.
  • Wrapped in a towel, dripping water onto the sea-grass, I traipse to the kitchen and switch on the kettle. CHAMELEON
  • In the video and comic Five Boroughs of the Soul (2004), he traipses New York's asphalt, shoeless. Artist of the week 107: David Blandy
  • We traipsed down to Pike Place Market just before closing and snatched up a bell pepper, red and gold tomatoes, a cucumber, two yams, and three sausages from Uli's: spinach bratwurst, hot Italian, and lamb.
  • They would traipse from festival to festival with me in my pram buried under a pile of tie-dye T-shirts and crocheted ponchos.
  • In a seamless division of labor, the mothers would traipse up and down the stairs and in and out of elevators with the children, while the dads would encamp in the living room sampling single-malt scotch. Suburban Tricks, Urban Treats
  • Round the corner, walking in Indian file, traipsed a raggle-taggle tribe of refugees. TICKLED PINK
  • I was beginning to feel like a pleb; as if I'd lost a bet with a friend with the forfeit being to traipse around the corridors of a hotel in nothing but a discoloured beach towel. A rainy day in Shanghai
  • However, as the teams traipsed off at 4 o'clock, those damnable weather gods decided to rain on Partick's parade.
  • Wrapped in a towel, dripping water onto the sea-grass, I traipse to the kitchen and switch on the kettle. CHAMELEON
  • The long traipse across the North York Moors had taken its toll.
  • We disrelish going into lousy-deal Kim's Music and Video (St. Marks), but we had already traipsed half the East Village looking for a band we'd just heard of called My Morning Jacket.
  • As it turned out there happened to be five of them and I was traipsed on up to the casualty unit.
  • Staff at a number of bars and hotels dressed for the occasion and ghosts, ghouls and goblins traipsed through the streets and shadows.
  • But the Japanese site looked so interesting, that I had a traipse around it.
  • I traipsed outside and cleared out about a foot of snow that had drifted into the dish.
  • I am too weak to traipse all the way there myself or I'd come with you. THE CALLIGRAPHER
  • So, living her dream vicariously through her son, she traipsed him round church halls to entertain audiences of stout women.
  • I am too weak to traipse all the way there myself or I'd come with you. THE CALLIGRAPHER
  • We loaded everything into pulks, which we dragged behind us for a traipse across hummocky tundra.
  • The police traipse through the house, the reporters destroy the gardens. RUNNING FROM THE LAW
  • Today all three finished in the "autobus", the group of about 60 non-climbers or pedalling wounded who traipsed in almost 37 minutes behind the leaders, exhausted and sweating profusely at the end of a long, hot day in the mountains. Sport news, comment and results | guardian.co.uk
  • I was beginning to feel like a pleb; as if I'd lost a bet with a friend with the forfeit being to traipse around the corridors of a hotel in nothing but a discoloured beach towel. A rainy day in Shanghai
  • I somehow thought I was home free after I'd eaten and traipsed off in the general direction of my art class, but a hand on my wrist stopped me.

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