Trundle

//ˈtɹʌndəl//

"Trundle" in a Sentence (36 examples)

I used to sleep in a trundle bed when I would visit my aunt and uncle.

"When he comes back will be turned out." "But I always knew it was a one-year job." "Oh you don't mind being like a rented article from Hertz's, like a trundle bed or a baby's potty?"

[…] you may […] place the whole weighty Clod upon a Trundle to be convey’d, and Replanted where you please,

[…] in case the Tree be very great […] you must then have a Gin or Crane, such a one as they have to Load Timber with; and by that you may weigh it out of its place, and place the whole upon a Trundle or Sledge, to convey it to the place you desire; and by the afore-said Engine you may take it off from the Trundle, and set it in its hole at your pleasure.

There was something expert and even vicious in the flick of Paul’s arm and the hard momentary trundle of the [cricket] ball along the curving rails.

[…] an old man who could always be located from far away by the sound of a scythe or the trundle of a wheelbarrow.

He could hear the trundle of cart wheels.

The Cog-wheels in most Wind-Mills are (in the diameter) 8. foot or under […] the trundle is at the least two foot, which is 4. to one.

between as many Trundles, Or […]

Gules, two broaches in saltire argent, between as many trundles or, on a chief of the second a lion passant gules - EMBROIDERERS' COMPANY at Bristol and Chester.

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Party of six argent and sable, on a fesse gules, between three lions of England, two broches (or embroidery needles) saltirewise between as many trundles or. Crest. - On a heart the Holy Dove displayed, argent, radiated or.

Every morning, the vendors trundle their carts out into the market.

to trundle a bed or a gun carriage

When the bin men come down the back alley to trundle our wheelie bins to their truck, the dog becomes hysterical […]

[…] they are attended like the Lords and Princes of the earth, with mighty retinues, and are carryed in coaches with foure or six horses a peece in them, when a wheele barrow such as they trundle white wine vineger about the towne were a great deale fitter for them […]

1761, George Colman, The Genius, No. 5, 6 August, 1761, in Prose on Several Occasions, London: T. Cadel, 1787, pp. 57-58, The reading female hires her novels from some country circulating library, which consists of about an hundred volumes, or, is trundled from the next market town in a wheelbarrow;

[…] Peter trundled a load of watermelons up the hill in his wheelbarrow.

The kraal walls are two feet thick and higher than his head; they are made of flat blue-grey stones, every one of them trundled here by donkey-cart.

[…] he can glibly run over Non-sense, as an empty Cart trundles down a Hill.

Until the main road from Hatfield to Hertford was diverted a few years ago, heavy lorries trundling through the village sometimes knocked chunks off corner buildings, but now the village has regained much of its former tranquillity.

Suddenly from around a bend a wagon trundled toward him.

My trip ends at Wrexham General. While the '150' trundles the final half-mile down the single line to Wrexham Central, I nip over the footbridge to explore the main part of the station.

I’ll clap a pair of horses to your chaise that shall trundle you off in a twinkling,

1928, W. B. Yeats, “Meditations in Time of Civil War,” 6. “The Stare’s Nest by My Window,” in The Tower, London: Macmillan, p. 27, Last night they trundled down the road That dead young soldier in his blood:

Betty. They are gone Sir, in great Anger. / Pet[ulant]. Enough, let 'em trundle. Anger helps Complexion, ſaves Paint.

... the proprietor trundled away to fetch a second beer ...

[…] we set off again, the dog trundling apathetic at his master’s heels,

she let the marmalade stay where it was, trundling in blobs down her plump cheeks

to trundle a hoop or a ball

1565, Andrew Boorde, Merie Tales of the Made Men of Gotam, London: Thomas Colwell, Tale 3, He layde downe hys poake, and tooke the cheeses, and dyd trundle them downe the hyll one after another:

If thou, my Deere, a winner be At trundling of the Ball, The wager thou shalt have, and me, And my misfortunes all.

At gaming, perhaps, I may win; With cards I may take the flats in, Or trundle false dice, and they’re nick’d:

[…] all our dainty terms for fratricide, Terms which we trundle smoothly o’er our tongues Like mere abstractions,

1818, John Keats, letter to Fanny Keats dated 4 July, 1818, in Sidney Colvin (ed.), Letters of John Keats to His Family and Friends, London: Macmillan, 1891, p. 122, [I am] so fatigued that when I am asleep you might sew my nose to my great toe and trundle me round the town like a Hoop without waking me.

At Chrystes death, whan the Apostles all Theyr mayster dyd leaue, throughe mutabylytie Men were founde lyght, and trundlynge as a ball In them was no fayth, but infydelytye

Water is apt to move, being round like Balls, No points to fixe, doth trundle as it falls.

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