The act of moving along swiftly (as before a gale)
1 Now, scudding barely over the rooftops, the destruction seemed far more personal.
2 In sight were several canoes with light sails, scudding before the wind.
3 Tattered, blue-purple clouds, reddening in the east, were scudding before the wind.
4 The wind had picked up outside, scudding gray clouds over the city.
5 Most of them were motionless; some, however, seemed to be scudding onward.
6 It was a livid sky, and sooty clouds were scudding across it.
7 He looked up at the sky where grey clouds were scudding along.
8 The day was raw, with ragged gray clouds scudding across the sky.
9 We had been scudding three days, when the weather became much worse.
10 The honey light of Faerie was gone, replaced by dark scudding clouds.
11 The tide was coming in, and the sun shone amidst scudding white clouds.
12 The split path they had made had long been effaced in scudding stone.
13 The moon was full and shed occasional pale gleams through the scudding clouds.
14 The sky was ragged with gray masses of cloud scudding across the blue.
15 But the head was already withdrawn, and its owner scudding toward the fray.
16 Then, away we went scudding across the South Atlantic Ocean for the equator.
Другие примеры для термина "scudding"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Scudding в диалектах
Соединенные Штаты Америки