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6 Sentences With "goes on foot"

How to use goes on foot in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "goes on foot" and check conjugation/comparative form for "goes on foot". Mastering all the usages of "goes on foot" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"Trump is the kind of guy who goes on foot to the car dealership and can't get a ride home without buying a car," Krikorian said.
There is also the inscription: ici on loge à pied ou à cheval (here one goes on foot or by horse) which is the location of the former postal relay. During the height of the station, 5-7 tons of fruit were transported by rail to Paris. In 1974 the station was destroyed following the construction of the dam. In 1978 the route was electrified in order to clear the left bank.
In the song he quotes two "book reviews" in Russian; the first is a long sentence that he then translates succinctly as "It stinks". The second, a different but equally long sentence, is also translated as "It stinks." The actual text of these sentences bear no relation to academics: the first phrase quotes Mussorgsky's Song of the Flea: "Once there was a king who had a pet flea." The second references a Russian joke: "Now I must go where even the Tsar goes on foot" [the bathroom].
Vaiko protested against Kerala's demand for a new dam at Mullaperiyar and proposed building of dams in Pambar and Siruvani. Vaiko also supported national interlinking of rivers and Sethusamudram Shipping Canal Project. Vaiko filed a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) in Madras High Court requesting closure of the copper smelting plant of Sterlite Industries in Tuticorin which did not follow the waste management procedures correctly and leading to the closure of the plant. Vaiko often goes on foot marches along with his party cadres to attract attention to issues.
The inscription on the house of Joseph Delteil in Pieusse reads: LA - BAS PRES DE LIMOUX. IL Y A UN VILLAGE QU'ON APPELLE PIEUSSE C EST MA PATRIE MA GRANDE... MAISON DE JOSEPH DELTEIL Joseph Delteil was born in the farm of La Pradeille, from a woodcutter-charcoal father and a "buissonnière" mother. Joseph Delteil spent the first four years of his childhood at the Borie (construction of dry stones) of Guillamau, 30 kilometers south of Carcassonne, in the Val de Dagne. Of this hovel, today there remain only stumps of walls, which one can always see while hiking on the "Path in poetry" at the entrance of which one reads "Here the time goes on foot" created by Magalie Arnaud, mayor of Villar-en-Val, and her friends to honor the memory of the poet. In 1898, his father purchased a vineyard plot at Pieusse (30 kilometers further on the side of Limoux).
In 1768, a Paris magazine reported: > "The common usage for quite some time now is not to go out without an > umbrella, and to have the inconvenience of carrying it under your arm for > six months in order to use it perhaps six times. Those who do not want to be > mistaken for vulgar people much prefer to take the risk of being soaked, > rather than to be regarded as someone who goes on foot; an umbrella is a > sure sign of someone who doesn't have his own carriage." Paris Street; Rainy Day, by Gustave Caillebotte (1877) In 1769, the Maison Antoine, a store at the Magasin d'Italie on rue Saint-Denis, was the first to offer umbrellas for rent to those caught in downpours, and it became a common practice. The Lieutenant General of Police of Paris issued regulations for the rental umbrellas; they were made of oiled green silk, and carried a number so they could be found and reclaimed if someone walked off with one.

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