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Wade

[ UK /wˈe‍ɪd/ ]
[ US /ˈweɪd/ ]
NOUN
  1. English tennis player who won many women's singles titles (born in 1945)

How To Use Wade In A Sentence

  • Laura Wade's Posh, timed to open as the Tories edged into power in May 2010, reminded us just what we were in for: overprivileged hooligans in drinking-society blazers who trash a pub as thoughtlessly as they will trash the country. Dominic Cooke: a life in theatre
  • My disorganization was a chaotic river that I waded through every day, somehow coming out the other end dry only due to the comparatively placid pace of being a Londoner. Ed Zitron: Ride the Whirlwind: Making a New York Minute Last
  • They waded the river at a shallow point.
  • They show high numbers of breeding waders in contrast to unmanaged unkeepered moors, which had very low numbers.
  • 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.
  • On the other hand, when armed with a large umbrella or a well-fitting raincoat and perhaps a pair of gumboots, it is possible to enjoy the monsoon rains, and take time out to splash through muddy puddles and wade through waterlogged roads.
  • Wade stepped inside and closed the inner door behind him.
  • The principal goal of Republican conservatives is to reverse the Roe v Wade ruling.
  • No sooner the rains began, traffic crawled, trees fell, power tripped and Bangaloreans waded home with a sense of déjà vu.
  • Wade, that aching right knee still apparently an issue, missed 10 of his 15 shots.
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