[ US /ˈtɹədʒ/ ]
[ UK /tɹˈʌd‍ʒ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a long difficult walk
VERB
  1. walk heavily and firmly, as when weary, or through mud
    Mules plodded in a circle around a grindstone
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How To Use trudge In A Sentence

  • Nevertheless, she put one foot in front of the other numbing herself to the pain and commenced her trudge.
  • Freestyle in those days was the trudgen, an alternating overarm stroke with a scissors kick.
  • He laughs as he recalls a particularly arduous day on location, trying to take some gear off a make-up girl for a long trudge up a hillside for the next scene, and being told off for it.
  • The instruments trudge along at a snail's pace and the recording quality is poor at best.
  • But this served only to stimulate the already keen energies of the Federal forces, who waded knee-deep through the clear Potomac, and trudged along over the 'sacred soil' with a willingness unchecked by the cold nor'wester that raged on that July morning. The Continental Monthly, Vol. 1, No. 3, March, 1862
  • When we arrived home I trudged up the stairs on my own, as he remained downstairs.
  • He tore off his vest as he trudged angrily away, left. The Sun
  • A historical novel, it is no dutiful trudge - rather an artful waka, rowing fast and with purpose.
  • About 100 kilometres away from the boma, a bare-footed lad trudged his way to a ramshackle school in Luumbo village down in the Gwembe valley.
  • I made it to Home Sweet Home dead dog-tired, checked in, trudged to my room, and opened the door. The Exorsistah: X Returns
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