Move about aimlessly or without any destination, often in search of food or employment.
Continue talking or writing in a desultory manner.
Sinônimos
Examples for "range"
Examples for "range"
1The market has been range-bound since late last week over political worries.
2Sometimes, a range of products comes along at exactly the right time.
3Yet US democracy is within Mr Trump's striking range at all times.
4This is the result of a range of factors, including climate change.
5They range from utility, oil and manufacturing companies to independent power producers.
1The election result has cast doubt on popular support for that project.
2Events surrounding CervicalCheck continue to cast a shadow over the health service.
3Animal prints: we think they're best left to cast members of Eastenders.
4The withdrawal agreement must give legal effect to that 'cast iron' guarantee.
5Clive Fugill said Covid-19 cast doubt on whether that legacy could continue.
1A free inflight Wi-Fi service is set to roll out this year.
2He may, indeed, require divine help to roll aside this particular stone.
3He thought the state was going to roll over on this case.
4However, the ministry said those roll numbers were what it would expect.
5Ms Bennett said the shared equity scheme should roll out next year.
1However, industry sources said that the deadline may drift into early July.
2Get-togethers between friends often naturally drift toward other activities as interests change.
3The intercontinental drift of consumer culture is far from a simple back-and-forth.
4People are exposed through spray drift, residues on food and water contamination.
5Type B change only by the more gradual process of antigenic drift.
1Workers no longer tramp or cycle home but drive warm, smart cars.
2Presently the heavy tramp of the patrol was heard in the street.
3The General rose, and once more his military tramp shook the gallery.
4At this instant the tramp of horses was heard in the courtyard.
5He heard the tramp of a million feet in the great cities.
1Go out on the seas; climb the mountains; wander through the valleys.
2Left to wander its own way, it tends to lead into silliness.
3Small animals wander around the camp, while larger ones can be heard.
4He merely meant to wander the halls and perhaps clear his mind.
5He had no reason to wander; perhaps that was the reason why.
1The swan was injured following the recent oil spillage in Bray Harbour.
2The question is, where would the swan go on the knight's journey?'
3The swan feathers were still in her box; I had recently looked.
4His prize was just dancing on the water, light as a swan.
5The swan ship that delivered Slayer should serve my needs well enough.
1Dublin Corporation's new regulations to control stray horses came into effect yesterday.
2He included the lines, Among your earthiest words the angels stray .
3He was offering to forget the stray, let him come or go.
4Record how long the chant was able to fend off stray thoughts.
5There are hundreds of stray cats among the holy sites in Jerusalem.
1Sable used to roam the Limpopo province in large numbers, years ago.
2That is easy to understand - learning to roam productively takes time.
3It's a great fear removed they no longer roam outside our gates.
4Certainly Selena didn't roam the house taking inventory of her various knickknacks.
5Ptolemy liked to stare out there and let his thoughts roam free.
1I have a vagabond streak in my blood and it's in evidence.
2Beverly laughed with keen enjoyment over the discomfiture of the shame-faced vagabond.
3He stuck his hands in his pockets, and felt vagabond-like and reckless.
4You indulge in a gesture of annoyance, and call me a vagabond.
5Every kind of restraint was naturally intolerable to such a vagabond nature.
1Winning back to paths of virtue all who now in error rove.
2He would rove the fields while the rest were working in them.
3In Westphalia the Hessians and Swedes rove about, rendering the roads unsafe.
4You rove where you will, deferring to no authority but your own.
5We'll rove together, for we are of them that have no homes.
An aimless amble on a winding course.
1Art3mis: As you may recall, I tend to ramble in real time.
2Otherwise the picture covers familiar ground and tends to ramble somewhat repetitively.
3Finding little else of interest in the paper, I continued my ramble.
4We had a delightful ramble through the valley, and over the hills.
5It is my holiday time, and I ramble on through the summer.
6I longed to be on shore to ramble beneath the elegant cocoa-nut-trees.
7It does not rain, so we ramble off about the streets again.
8When there was comm lag, it was difficult not to ramble on.
9I had the pleasure of a pitch side ramble pre-kick-off on Saturday.
10I was just taking a little ramble over the moors, she explained.
11One day my teacher and I were returning from a long ramble.
12I ramble around the park and see lovers on benches-it'srather thrilling.
13This patriarchal politeness was by no means indifferent after my tiresome ramble.
14After dinner, Everard, Emily and the children, went out for a ramble.
15Half under his breath Link Ferris began to talk-orrather to ramble.
16The ramble is not irrelevant, it shows how a writer's mind-mine ,anyway-works
Sobre este termo
Verbo
Indicativo · Presente
Ramble nas variantes da língua
Estados Unidos da América