How To Use Tramp In A Sentence

  • He was trampled to death by a runaway horse.
  • Appropriately, he spends most of his days on tramp steamers, skiffs and barges.
  • I was kneeling on the floor beneath his feet and nearly got trampled to death in the scrum.
  • The shelty came down over the rump of a red bullock, and Sim was sprawling on his face in the trampled grass. The Moon Endureth: Tales and Fancies
  • The mini-trampoline rebounder gets amazing results for almost anyone.
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  • Now, more than ever before, the study of battles will involve a literal trampling upon dead men's bones.
  • The three rivers can become impassable after rain, and trampers usually traverse west to east, so that the river wades are predictable at the time of departure.
  • We tramped across the wet grass to look at the statue.
  • I was at home with herds and tramps and roadmen, and I was sufficiently at my ease with people like Sir Walter and the men I had met the night before. The Thirty-Nine Steps
  • This is a wonderfully nourishing cake to take on a winter tramp or to a working bee.
  • There's even more proof in the new duets album: While the pairings add to the jollity Lady Gaga is amazingly likable, and not at all trampy, on "The Lady Is a Tramp", the real attraction is Mr. Bennett himself. Ready for His Autumn Waltz
  • Don't trample mud from your shoes on to the floor; I've just this minute swept it.
  • I grabbed an ice pick off the sledge and tramped away from the camp towards the face of Portal Mountain.
  • She circled back and settled gracefully to earth at the spot where the trampling began. A Time of War
  • To see their team go down without a fight, to see the good name of their club trampled underfoot, to see the game laughing at them. The Sun
  • What causes the balls to fly off these bats is a nifty bit of physics called the trampoline effect.
  • My idea of a desert is an eternal agony, plotted by the fury of the aridity, by the implacable confusion of a sun which, trampled by the wind, melts with the sand, until there is no other landscape than the sand dominating the sky, the ground, the wind. Flowers in the Desert
  • In the final scene, the young woman with her sight restored recognizes Charlie, the down-and-out tramp, as the rich and princely hero of her imagination.
  • By day, watch your step, obey the rules or they may call you castrater, bitch, slob, pig, cow, slut whore prostitute chippy tramp. The Women’s Room
  • Difficulties cannot be artificially overcome," said Mirabeau, "nor is there any invention whereby a man may be spared the trouble of conquering them; they must be grasped firmly, strangled, crushed, trampled down in manful fight. Zoe: The History of Two Lives
  • The wounded were trampled and drowned in the shallow waves.
  • This material is unsorted and is usually mixed with other transported material from the same sources including slopewash, solifluction, or trampling.
  • She had been alerted online to the product by an Indian citizen appalled at the prospect of people trampling over or wiping their feet on the emblem. Times, Sunday Times
  • A colporteur, known to me, when engaged selling Bibles in a Brazilian town, reports that the fanatical populace got his books and carried them, fastened and burning, at the end of blazing torches, while they tramped the streets, yelling: "Away with all false books! Through Five Republics on Horseback, Being an Account of Many Wanderings in South America
  • I don't know what you're rambling on about, Flinx," she finally declared, "but either you ride the grizel or it tramples you. Orphan Star
  • Don't trample on grass.
  • Don't trample on the grass.
  • It involves breakdancing, acrobats and, you guessed it, a trampoline. Times, Sunday Times
  • Perhaps I am a farmer myself — an innocent colonus; and instead of being able to get to church with my family, have to see squadrons of French dragoons thundering upon my barley, and squares of English infantry forming and trampling all over my oats. Roundabout Papers
  • He jumped off the table to the mattress, trampolined off that to the Gold Mountain trunk and onto the chair.
  • They rocked the world with Fantasia and Snow White and Lady and the Tramp, but Mulan and the Lion King and Beauty and the Beast were rather lame as far as I've heard.
  • As he tried to separate two bulls that were fighting, he was knocked over and trampled, receiving multiple injuries including fractures to his ribs and spine.
  • He argues that the Congress and President Clinton trampled the constitutional rights of legal immigrants in the new welfare reform law.
  • The warriors remained calm and relaxed, listening to the trample of the demonic horde just feet in front of them.
  • They came tramping through the kitchen leaving dirty footmarks.
  • Know that thou shalt not escape unstung, after trampling on the head of a venomous snake, licking the corners of its mouth with its tongue, and who hath been hurt by thy foot. The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 1 Books 1, 2 and 3
  • Companies that trampled over shareholders' right of first refusal over new stock would do so at their peril, they muttered darkly. Times, Sunday Times
  • Even after thirty years living in the country, I fear I am not a proper countryman. I don't farm for a living or go tramping across drenched fields, gun in hand.
  • Laws made by common consent must not be trampled on by individuals. George Washington 
  • It will recommend that schools introduce new exercise classes such as boxercise, trampolining, aerobics and yoga to lure teenagers off the couch.
  • The Chinese also have risen recently in trampoline, enough to push the country's gymnastics medal haul to double figures. 2008 Olympic medal projections
  • They dashed through the entrance, nearly trampling the stout guard in the process.
  • Starting out, I spent a lot of time on the trampoline getting comfortable landing on my back.
  • Kids were jumping on the trampoline, shooting baskets and playing manhunt, a variation on hide - and - seek.
  • The tramp of those pale feet might interrupt the flow of his patronising patter.
  • Or would she trample it underfoot in the slush where our love lay? Times, Sunday Times
  • In size there is the difference between the huge _terminalia_ towering up 200 feet high and the tiny little potentilla; between the atlas moth 12 inches in spread and the hardly discernible midges; between the elephant, massive enough to trample its way through the densest forest, and the humble little mouse peeping out of its hole in the ground. The Heart of Nature or, The Quest for Natural Beauty
  • A little 'calk' all round won't hurt us after that tramp, Sergeant!" he observed kindly. The Luck of the Mounted A Tale of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police
  • The last thing a private detective wants to be doing is trampling all over the evidence and cocking it up.
  • With a new name adorning the number one position after almost every match, the Daredevils, who climbed to the coveted position after trampling over event's whipping boys Kolkata Knight Riders by nine wickets, would have to up the ante when they take on Sachin Tendulkar's army for the first time in the tournament. Times Now
  • I don't want all those people trampling about all over my flower beds.
  • Have you ever admired those pictures of trampers walking through beautiful forest, or standing on a mountain top gazing over valleys or glaciers, and wished it were you?
  • They claimed that disembodied spirits can wander in and out of the minds of the living as easily as a tramp can walk into a house with its doors and windows open.
  • The campers had trampled the corn .
  • But why to dream of lettuce should presage some ensuing disease, why to eat figs should signify foolish talk, why to eat eggs great trouble, and to dream of blindness should be so highly commended, according to the oneirocritical verses of Astrampsychus and Nicephorus, I shall leave unto your divination. Religio Medici, Hydriotaphia, and the Letter to a Friend
  • Anybody who stood in his path was trampled underfoot. The Sun
  • The Carrizoso plateau had been sacred ground, and it was unsupposable that it could ever be desecrated by the trampling hoofs and scissor noses of these woolly abominations. Heart's Desire
  • He gripped his brother's arm lest he be trampled by the mob.
  • Although no one has bounced off a trampoline or been squashed by a widescreen TV at my house (yet! Times, Sunday Times
  • Yet there was only one recorded clockwork crime, in which a tramp was beaten to death by a teenager.
  • But if a prince shall deign to be familiar, and to converse with those upon whom he might trample, shall his condescension therefore unking him, and his familiarity rob him of his royalty? Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. II.
  • I pity the fool who calls her skank and tramp and trollop and slut. Paris Hilton Is a Medical Miracle
  • A TOP young gymnast has died after bouncing off a trampoline and landing on his head. The Sun
  • There will also be a bike park with tracks of varying difficulty, and a bungee trampoline to bounce you high into the air. Times, Sunday Times
  • He slipped over the ragged mat which formed the eaves, and the next moment, _crack, crack, crack_, he was hanging feet downwards, and then fell heavily in a cloud of dust bump upon the trampled earth, in company with a snake about six feet long, which began to glide rapidly away. Trapped by Malays A Tale of Bayonet and Kris
  • In the back garden is a swimming pool and a trampoline. The Sun
  • When Leonard Bernstein unleashed his sprawling Third Symphony - titled "Kaddish" - on the American public in January 1964, the critics practically trampled one another to get in the first jabs. The Washington Post: National, World & D.C. Area News and Headlines - The Washington Post
  • In a darkened hallway, a young girl and her parents stare after the teenager tramping upstairs.
  • He heard the trample of a soldier and the muffled sound of the grenade going off.
  • But both of those crowds could be dwarfed by an anticipated 9,000 gate at the Kassam Stadium, which would be United's best attendance since the play-off semi-final second leg against Exeter when 10,691 packed in - including a good-sized following from Devon. saddletramp, wantage says ... Undefined
  • Why do the vast tribes of India, deceived and enslaved by the bonzes, trampled upon by the descendant of a Tartar, bowed down by labor, groaning in misery, assailed by diseases, and a mark for all the scourges and plagues of life, still fondly cling to that life? A Philosophical Dictionary
  • The monolith brooded gaunt and silent above the sward which waved, green and untrampled, in the morning breeze. People of the Dark
  • Do you think your father would stop work to talk to tramps?" she demanded of the boy, who visibly quailed, even as Josiah. THE PRODIGAL FATHER
  • The homeless tramp sleeps peacefully on the bench.
  • Peering downwards, praying she hadn't just inadvertently trampled on Zebedee or Orlando or little Tallulah in the gloom, she grinned. TICKLED PINK
  • It is very apparent that you and your magazine are hypocrites and do not support untrampled backcountry where you don't hear or smell vehicles. ATVs in Wilderness
  • A thief who tried to escape justice was caught in mid-air after he inadvertently jumped onto a trampoline. Times, Sunday Times
  • She circled back and settled gracefully to earth at the spot where the trampling began. A Time of War
  • Sorry, but reality got trampled in the stampede. Times, Sunday Times
  • She's also a qualified trampoline coach, a former bank manager - and she's potty about country music!
  • Like teachers of the piano or of trampoline jumping, trainers charge varying amounts for tuition. The Sun
  • Ours loved playing on the slide and trampoline and in the sandpit. The Sun
  • They used to be just another attraction at a children's zoo - but then they learned to trampoline.
  • Armed with a third key, I tramp up the stairs once more.
  • A rebounder is a mini-trampoline with stiffer springs. Tahoe Daily Tribune - Top Stories
  • Then a clumsy foot in a cow-leather boot or heavy wooden-pegged veldschoen would be thrust out, and the boy would be tripped up and go down, and the crowd would deliberately kick and trample the life out of him, and no one would be able to say how or by whom the thing had been done. The Dop Doctor
  • Users combine trampolining with team sports including dodgeball, basketball and football. Times, Sunday Times
  • Experience in gymnastics or on a trampoline helps a lot, as it teaches control and manipulation of one's body as it moves unpredictably through space.
  • Secondly, how come on the day of the royal visit there wasn't one tramp or beggar to be found on the street?
  • She had a huge 20ft swimming pool in the garden and a large trampoline. The Sun
  • He gazed longingly up at the immense, empty sky that cut across the nearby horizon through the naked trees and began tramping through the snow towards it.
  • Also, we met many English sportsmen tramping and camping among the mountains in search of the "moufflon," a kind of mountain wild sheep, which, at a short distance, looks very like a donkey with big ram's horns on its head. Young Knights of the Empire : Their Code, and Further Scout Yarns
  • If too many people trample on it, it will die. Times, Sunday Times
  • Conservation officers get the beasts to trample shacks on protected forest land in the Assam region, where hilly terrain makes bulldozers impractical. The Sun
  • In the case of stock farming and game ranching care can be taken not to overstock and nesting areas of ground nesting bees and wasps can be protected from trampling.
  • One of the more unusual recruits to the unit was Tramp, a mongrel dog found starving and very ill in a puddle under the yacht.
  • The old tramp taught the newcomer how to make himself comfortable on a park bench.
  • One can only conjecture about the discomfort and indignity that Sharp, an asthmatic vegan, suffered in his quest, tramping up muddy tracks in the Appalachian mountains, where one community tried to convince him chicken was a vegetable. Cecil Sharp and the Morris Men
  • There was a small fence to stop people trampling on the flowers.
  • Near by, a deep bed of tansies was growing; it seems to me that even now I can smell the sharp reek of those tansies, warring with the reek of tramps. Down and Out in Paris and London
  • I figured that parallel valleys all drained to the same place, so I tramped downstream along a creek until it emptied into a river adjacent to an unfamiliar trail.
  • Built in Glasgow in 1910, this vessel tramped her way around the globe for the next three decades, until she was requisitioned by an Admiralty hurriedly preparing for a war it was desperately unready to fight.
  • International law has been trampled underfoot. Times, Sunday Times
  • In September, 54 conscripts were arrested after abandoning their barracks in southern Russia and tramped nearly 35 miles to the city of Volgograd to protest at beatings by their superiors.
  • Even when it tramples all over other principles that he purports to hold dear.
  • So after doing a CPS transform and then trampolining it by returning a lambda wrapped "thunk", my interpreter *should have* handled an infinite tail recursive call *without* a stack overflow exception. Archive 2008-07-01
  • It's as if Victoria wants to remembered for something else except for mothering David's kids, and being trampled on at the same time.
  • ok my chest is un even ... it happened when i was on a trampolin and fell off and landed on my chest. it is just no even like one side sicks out more then the other it doesnt hurt or anything butt it is clearly offset Yahoo! Answers: Latest Questions
  • With the strong southerly winds, windchill will be severe for animals and trampers in open areas.
  • Paul was trampled on by the home team and screamed like a pig.
  • People rushed for the exits and a woman of 30 trampled in the panic went into labour. The Sun
  • As they trample on nationalities to reproduce London and Londoners in Europe and Asia, so they fear the hostility of ideas, of poetry, of religion, -- ghosts which they cannot lay; -- and, having attempted to domesticate and dress the Blessed Soul itself in English broadcloth and gaiters, they are tormented with fear that herein lurks a force that will sweep their system away. English Traits (1856)
  • Voices still chattered in the hallway, doors squeaked open, slammed shut, feet thumped, tramped up and down the stairs.
  • Use a trampoline or get her jumping on your bed. The Sun
  • Ahead, the landing consisted of trampled soil, and perhaps ten canoes had already been beached and inverted to keep rain from pooling inside. Fire The Sky
  • Even in "Consecration" we hear the challenging ring of a young voice who has wandered over the face of the earth and has taken his place with the "Outcast," has cast his lot with the sailor, the stoker, the tramp. Giant Hours with Poet Preachers
  • Mr. Brenkus also informs us that the coefficient of "restitution," which measures bounce or impact, is a major element in the effort to increase the power of a golf swing by increasing the springiness or "trampoline" quality of the clubface (see the 543-yarder above). Unbreakable Sports Records
  • Analysis has shown that the avenue was heavily trampled by prehistoric feet, and archaeologists have unearthed numerous finds along its edge.
  • My configuration is almost the same as yours except: 1, (tramp-login-args (( "- telnet") ( "% h"))); 2, I didn't configure tramp-password-end-of-line. - lgfang EmacsWiki: RecentChanges
  • Few schools had a special uniform for summer, so the girls remember having to go tramping in the heat in serge gym frocks and white blouses and regulation footwear.
  • We spent a week tramping the streets of Rome, looking for movie locations.
  • Trampoline classes teach students the fundamentals of body awareness and training for somersaults, twists, and flips.
  • The homeless are often stereotyped as being tramps or junkies who litter shop doorways.
  • I refuse to be trampled on any longer!
  • The most fun was the high jump, where we used a trampoline to jump over an elastic thread before landing in the pool. Times, Sunday Times
  • “Every one of those wild fellows,” said I to myself, “is worth a dozen of the poor mean-spirited book-tramper I have lately been discoursing with.” Wild Wales : Its People, Language and Scenery
  • At home he exercised on a trampoline and chinning bar and did roadwork like a prizefighter.
  • I had to face the drunken tramps and the scorn of those wannabe policemen and women: the ticket inspectors.
  • The apes, saturated and peaceful, lived in sophisticated playfulness, or caught fleas in philosophic contemplation; the Neanderthaler trampled gloomily through the world, banging around with clubs. Autumn
  • First a drunken tramp got on and started bawling and shouting and generally upsetting people.
  • Little sins often slide into the soul, and breed, and work secretly and undiscernibly in the soul, till they come to be so strong as to trample upon the soul, and to cut the throat of the soul. Challies Dot Com
  • During the past few months the city papers have referred to St. Vincent as the leprosy town, Hallock was referred to as the pauper district; we have been advertised as the refuge of tramps and quarantined on account of glanders*; but last of all and worst of all Bro, W-- --- has commenced pelting us with poetry, and SUCH poetry! "...Leprosy Town..."
  • One woman was shot through the face, but that was not worthy of notice, for she was only a _colored woman_; and in that, as in other slave States, the laws give to the white population the liberty to trample under foot the claims of all such persons to justice. Twenty-Two Years a Slave, and Forty Years a Freeman Embracing a Correspondence of Several Years, While President of Wilberforce Colony, London, Canada West
  • The Sunday trips we made up the Neckar: each morning early we would take the train and ride to where we had walked the Sunday previous; then we would tramp as far as we could, -- meaning until dark, -- have lunch at some untouristed inn along the road, or perhaps eat a picnic lunch of our own in some old castle ruin, and then ride home. An American Idyll The Life of Carleton H. Parker
  • He felt a jealous chagrin as he watched them follow her into the church, an anger that she dared to trample upon him that way, a fierce desire to get away and quaff the cup of admiration at the hand of some of his own friends, or to quaff some cup, _any_ cup, for he was thirsty, thirsty, _thirsty_, and this was a dry and barren land. The City of Fire
  • Hazel, whose diary is fully booked, takes clients for walks and bike rides and takes trampolines and skipping ropes to their houses for toning exercises.
  • Sorry, but reality got trampled in the stampede. Times, Sunday Times
  • In this case the protagonists are two brothers - weak, aimless Aston and aggressive, controlling Mick - and Davies, the tramp who inveigles himself into their lives.
  • The rain still fell, and the ground beneath my feet was wet and miry; in short, it was a night in which even a tramper by profession would feel more comfortable in being housed than abroad. Lavengro
  • THE ship which thus appeared before the castaways had long "tramped" the ocean, wandering from one port to another as freights offered. The Wrecker
  • She had a huge 20ft swimming pool in the garden and a large trampoline. The Sun
  • For five rainy days he tramped ever-widening circles out from the base, traversing ridges and saddles and moiling through valleys while the armed guard followed him every step of the way.
  • But he was feeling so much like trampled horse turds that it wasn't until he'd read not only her organ donor card but also the name imprinted on her cheques that he realised who the woman actually was. A Traitor to Memory
  • From the mountainous piles of refuse, of "culm," barefooted children, nearly as black as their miner fathers, were tramping homeward with burdens of coal that they had gleaned from the waste. Derrick Sterling A Story of the Mines
  • When street sweeping and a boxing match against a bruiser twice his size fail to raise the necessary funds, the Tramp turns to his millionaire friend for help.
  • Ony is food on the mountain is all that fast, but you burn on the runway. trampolin mit netz Why You Should Care if Cattle Get Fourth-Generation Cephalosporins - The Panda's Thumb
  • So Monday I go to the Registro Publico with my documents and my real estate attorney to pay the transfer taxes get my escrituras without the high falutin ', holier than thou Notario Tramposo. A Notario is not God
  • There is a whiff of conspiracy in the air and it reeks pungently of Chardonnay glugging down the plug hole and just a dash of carpet-trampled kettle chips.
  • Or they can do what Kiwis do best: tramp along the ten-mile Moeraki Valley trail system, where wild orchids grow.
  • Every sound was muffled, every noise changed to something soft and musical. No more tramping hoofs, no more rattling wheels! Only the chiming of the sleigh-bells, beating as swift and merrily as the hearts of children.
  • And that question was not: Why would anyone want to spend months tramping around the mephitic, reptile-infested and politically dysfunctional northeast coast of South America? From Guyana to Guiana
  • Acrobatics has maintained its status as a spectacular bodily art; complex gymnastic feats are now often performed with apparatus such as balls, unicycles, trampolines, tightropes, and trapezes.
  • I am the Sullivan that trumpeting tramp, from Suffering Duf-ferin the Sit of her Style, from Kathleen May Vernon her Mebbe fair efforts, from Fillthepot Curran his scotchlove machree-ther, from hymn Op. Finnegans Wake
  • Clements: I mean, very, very early on we kind of zeroed in on ‘Bambi’ and ‘Lady and the Tramp’, elements of both those films that we liked, particularly ‘Lady and The Tramp’ for New Orleans because a lot of the movie takes place in the city of New Orleans and ‘Bambi’ for the bayou. Interview: The Princess and the Frog Directors Jon Musker and Ron Clements | /Film
  • Later, the king sent a herd of oxen to trample his enemy, but the cattle took care not to hurt Zoroaster.
  • There are delightful libraries, more aromatic than stores of spicery; there are luxuriant parks of all manner of volumes; there are Academic meads shaken by the tramp of scholars; there are lounges of Athens; walks of the Peripatetics; peaks of Parnassus; and porches of the Stoics. The Love of Books : The Philobiblon of Richard de Bury
  • Sports on offer this summer include short tennis, gymnastics, basketball, trampolining and table tennis.
  • This is an incredible case of where the needs of the many are trampled on for the needs of the one.
  • In the meantime, the Feds have again shown a determination to trample on civil liberties to harass nonviolent protestors.
  • Did that basketball god who trampled my heart with his hightop get all bald and portly? Blog: Facebook, I can't quit you
  • Then we continued on to the Blue Lake, where eating and drinking would trample Maori sensitivities, since they regard it as a sacred spot.
  • I wore my big, thick woolly tramping socks to work the other day.
  • The "knowns" -- the gifted Galt MacDermott, the ingenious British designer John Bury, the not yet knighted Peter Hall, couldn't have had better pedigrees for approaching a piece of such ambition: there was a space ship that sailed over the orchestra; trampolines cratered into the stage to bounce us like 'low gravity' might, and a massive rocket tail would blast us all off at the show's end in quadraphonic sound. Melanie Chartoff: Spine-tingling"Spiderman"--for All the Wrong Reasons
  • A ghazi — raid — one group of Bedouin carried off against another, that meant trampling two fields and killing a milch cow. O Jerusalem
  • This noble Venetian Dame then exhibited, beneath an old white satin bedgown, made to cover her arms and breast, the dress in which she had equipped herself, between the acts, to be ready for trampling home; namely, a dirty red and white linen gown, an old blue stuff quilted coat, and black shoes and stockings. Camilla: or, A Picture of Youth
  • Eng. for “young hobo,” one who is new on the road and usually in the company of an older tramp, with catamite connotations. Literacy; why is it that we want to stay with modern meaning rather than return to the True meaning of a word? « Children Literacy « Literacy Help « Literacy News
  • Chaos and violence ensued as miners trampled over each other in the rush. Times, Sunday Times
  • Beavers fell trees, elephants trample plants, ants strip trees of bark, moles dig tunnels, and so the list goes on.
  • After the tramp had washed his feet and his socks, he tip-toed over the gravel to the grass.
  • These cargo planes are the modern equivalents of the tramp steamer.
  • In this category fall some of the adaptive activities of psychotics, autists, pariahs, outcasts, vagrants, vagabonds, tramps, chronic drunkards and drug addicts.
  • The pleasure he takes in humbling the proud and exalting those of low degree (v. 6): The Lord lifts up the meek, who abase themselves before him, and whom men trample on; but the wicked, who conduct themselves insolently towards God and scornfully towards all mankind, who lift up themselves in pride and folly, he casteth down to the ground, sometimes by very humbling providences in this world, at furthest in the day when their faces shall be filled with everlasting shame. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume III (Job to Song of Solomon)
  • Blue armour was visible, and the tramp of armoured feet was just audible, even above the roaring storm.
  • Off in the distance, well out of sight, a comparable number of protesters partied in the streets, sang, bounced on trampolines, enjoyed live music and, by my reckoning, seemed to be having at lot more fun.
  • But the technology may 'trample' civil liberties and privacy rights, warns Graeme Norton of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association. Top Stories - Google News
  • No one would "shanghai" a gentleman to crew some tramp ship; for one thing, what was the point? The Serpent's Shadow
  • The tramp was arraigned on a charge of stealing.
  • If men's wages fall below a certain limit, they become tramps, thieves, and robbers; but woman's wages _have no limit_, since she can always work for less than she can subsist upon, the _paths of shame being open to her_. Women Wage-Earners Their Past, Their Present, and Their Future
  • The cub painted a high-light picture of his poor little room, its oil-stove and the one chair, and of the death's-head tramp who kept him company and who looked as if he had just emerged from twenty years of solitary confinement in some fortress dungeon. Chapter 39
  • People were trampled in the headlong rush.
  • This memory came just in time, enabling her to dive out of the way to avoid being immediately trampled by the sudden stampede of the rest of the Callisto family into the kitchen.
  • I remember the pure exhilaration of tramping the steep slopes of the hills and mountains with him in search of our elusive prey.
  • We spent a week tramping the streets of Rome, looking for movie locations.
  • He associated with tramps and beggars, whores and ruffians.
  • Fighting and shooting broke out, triggering a panicked stampede in which several people were trampled to death.
  • Diplomats denounced the leaders for trampling their citizens' civil rights.
  • Somebody trampled all over my flowerbeds in the night!
  • Jump on a trampoline without a safety net? Times, Sunday Times
  • Bark covered helicopter pads and sites for parking are provided, making the forests attractive to tourists, trampers, mountain bikers and hunters.
  • Well I was fairly reserved; my mum was super excited and I was internally, so it wasn't like I was jumping around doing handstands or using the trampoline or anything like that.
  • A good question, and in reply we ask you to imagine a tramp steamer packed to the gunwales with volumes one, three and five as we speak chugging its way across the Atlantic.
  • They began to trample their way up the slopes yet again, the crisp snow crunching beneath their feet.
  • In order to further reveal his xenophobic nature, it would not be a bad idea to recall his extraordinary proposal that Gandhi should be bound hand and foot and trampled by viceregal elephants.
  • Shockingly she used her umbrella as a shield and said snowball simply trampolined off the umbrella and broke on the ground.
  • The panicking passengers who trampled on the dead in their desperation to flee. Times, Sunday Times
  • My accommodation has all the delights of a tramping hut - it's peaceful, secluded, cosy and rustic, close to a stream and the bush.
  • There was a strange thumping at my ribs when I had the garron at the door, and would be tramping the long yellow straw from his forefeet, and I led him out of the yard and we were on the shoulder of the black hill when the moon was beginning to go down. The McBrides A Romance of Arran
  • Here was a man who had done the very thing which he himself had started to do; -- "tramped" the road. The Treasure of Heaven A Romance of Riches
  • Miss Drexel, seized by inspiration or desperation, with a quick movement stripped off her short, corduroy tramping-skirt, and, looking very lithe and boyish in slender-cut pongee bloomers, ran along the sand and dropped the skirt for a foothold for the slowly revolving wheels. WHOSE BUSINESS IS TO LIVE
  • The multitude fled with precipitation towards the city; several were slain, and many more were trampled to death; but when the cavalry entered the streets, their pursuit was checked by a shower of stones and darts from the roofs and windows of the houses. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire

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