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Antonyms for trudge


Grammar : Verb
Spell : truhj
Phonetic Transcription : trʌdʒ



Definition of trudge

Origin :
  • "to walk laboriously," 1540s, of unknown origin. Related: Trudged; trudging. The noun meaning "an act of trudging" is attested from 1835.
  • verb walk heavily
Example sentences :
  • To ride a-horseback is surely pleasanter than to trudge a-foot?
  • Extract from : « Cyropaedia » by Xenophon
  • Then deleever it word for word to me, young mon, and I'll trudge off to Frances.
  • Extract from : « Lords of the North » by A. C. Laut
  • We trudge in the treadmill and call it love of our ancient institutions.
  • Extract from : « A Preface to Politics » by Walter Lippmann
  • Now I must trudge off and do a little business on my own account, seeing we 'return on Friday.'
  • Extract from : « Three People » by Pansy
  • But I'll find that man if I have to trudge through the whole kingdom.
  • Extract from : « Europa's Fairy Book » by Joseph Jacobs
  • Get thee an ape, and trudge the land The leader of a juggling band.
  • Extract from : « Hopes and Fears » by Charlotte M. Yonge
  • I cannot trudge on foot all the distance through the deep snow.
  • Extract from : « Snow Shoes and Canoes » by William H. G. Kingston
  • He and she will trudge for miles to dance at some distant village inn.
  • Extract from : « Home Life in Germany » by Mrs. Alfred Sidgwick
  • You can shoot a bullet a whole mile, and are not bothered to trudge after it.
  • Extract from : « The Spirit of the Links » by Henry Leach
  • Let us see them, as they trudge homeward, with their rich prizes.
  • Extract from : « Wigwam and War-path; Or the Royal Chief in Chains » by A. B. (Alfred Benjamin) Meacham

Synonyms for trudge

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019