1 Now we've just got to traipse all the way back up again.
2 She couldn't traipse off from the clinic for an entire weekend, anyway.
3 What to eat as you traipse around town visiting assorted noble venues?
4 Next time, give me advance warning before you traipse off on your own.
5 She watched them traipse down the stairs, must be about six of them.
6 I have to traipse down nine flights of stairs to the car park.
7 It's not like I traipse around the house with all the lights on.
8 Must go, stumble, waddle, traipse like the Mummy, follow the whimper.
9 Out for a stroll, a traipse , a promenade and a dander.
10 Don't you know everybody has to bury their dead as they traipse along?
11 I traipse back to the kitchen soughing out a disgusted breath.
12 I left the door unlocked, but Morelli didn't traipse inside.
13 You cannot take me to Dublin, and I cannot traipse about the Irish countryside.
14 She lived nearby and would often " traipse over" to help them find it.
15 And some hens will traipse chicks through the grass and weeds as far as turkeys.
16 This one digs burrows and waits there for other insects to traipse by, then pounces.
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About this term traipse
Verb
Indicative · Present