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16 Sentences With "takes a stroll"

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

Meanwhile, Catherine takes a stroll down memory lane, recounting her first surgery ever.
Presumably it'll be a little while longer before the couple takes a stroll down the aisle.
He also takes a stroll on a treadmill to none other than "Lovefool" by The Cardigans.
It only takes a stroll down Princelet Street to learn that this is not who Britons are.
Left unattended at night, Shawshank's newest parolee takes a stroll through downtown, where he's drawn to the music and laughter at a family birthday party, heard through an open window.
Later, Hi Jolly explains that camels are afraid of water; if Clemmons had dismounted and demonstrated the water was shallow, the camels would have crossed. That night, Jennifer takes a stroll with Clemmons, who tells her Col. Hawkins is cancelling the camel project. When Clemmons whines that he is a failure, Jennifer scolds him for being too cowardly to fight for his career.
The plot is partially narrated by journalist and author, Emile Blondet. The narrator talks about events he has witnessed, mainly his admiration for Armande d'Esgrignon and a small provincial town where his father, the respectable judge Blondet, still lives. As a child, Blondet frequently watches Armande while she takes a stroll with her nephew, Victurien d'Esgrigon. The angel-faced child is carefully taken care of, as he does not have a mother.
He winds up fighting the Japanese students, defeating all of them, including their sensei, single-handedly. He smashes the glass on the sign and makes the students who taunted him earlier chew up the paper bearing the derogatory words, so as to make them literally "eat their words". Later, Chen takes a stroll to a park. A Sikh guard refuses him entry, due to a posted sign that forbids dogs and Chinese in the park.
The narrator, who has a habit of taking late-night walks and patronizing movie theaters, takes a stroll into a part of town that he had never visited before. During his wandering, he comes across a strange theater advertising a single feature known as "The Glamour". His curiosity piqued, he approaches the theater and learns from the man at the ticket window that admission is free. Upon entering the theater, he realizes that the building is quite odd.
In 1998, Larson published his first post-Far Side book There's a Hair in My Dirt!: A Worm's Story, an illustrated book with thematic similarities to The Far Side. The short book tells the story of an earthworm who feels that his life is insignificant. The main plot is told by the young worm's father and follows the beautiful (but slightly dim) human maiden Harriet, who takes a stroll across a woodland trail, encountering different aspects of the ecological world.
When Chief Justice Davis B. Keniston died in 1954, Governor Christian Herter appointed Adlow to replace him as Chief Justice on April 22, 1954."Herter Names Judge Adlow Chief Justice" The Boston Globe, page 18, April 23, 1954. In his role as Chief Justice, he presided over 8 Associate Justices and 5 Special Justices in the busiest court in New England and one of the 10 busiest courts in the United States."Judge Adlow takes a stroll" The Boston Globe, page 37, April 11, 1976.
The story centers around an unnamed mail steamer sailing the Atlantic Ocean with passengers, crew, mail and baggage aboard. The main character, a sailor named Thompson, gives an account of his ocean voyage. After a brief scrap with a British Steerage passenger, Thompson goes out on deck later that night and takes a stroll on the Boat Deck. He worries about the number of lifeboats on board and their approximate capacity; about 400 people could be saved on a ship carrying 916 people altogether.
However, she doesn't reveal the message because it was a private conversation between her and the flying saucer. Government authorities capture and examine the saucer but find it empty, and they are unable to identify the composition of its hull. Soon, Margaret's mother throws her out of the house so she goes to stay at a hotel and, later, when Margaret takes a stroll on the crowded boardwalk, she is approached by a woman who thinks that Jesus spoke to her through the saucer. She believes that Margaret has the power to heal but Margaret flees in tears.
This part recounts the rendezvous of Chung Vô Diệm and King of Qi Điền Hằng in a mulberry garden and her subsequent enthronement as the Queen of Qi. The King of Qi, advised by his close strategist, takes a stroll through the countryside. He encounters a tiger and when fleeing for his life, is saved by a veiled Chung Vô Diệm. Grateful and full with anticipation, the King promises to make her his queen. Chung Vô Diệm then lifts the veil and upon which the King is so scared by her demonic appearance that he immediately goes back on his words.
As Henry and Cinderella take off into the forest, the two are met by thieves who want the motorcycle, but suddenly Regina appears and ready to help, only to have Henry telling her that he and Cinderella are handling them fine. Later on, Regina takes a stroll in the woods when she sees a hooded figure attacked by sentient vines. She saves her, only to discover that the hooded figure is Drizella, who is on a mission to steal magic. Regina starts training Drizella but after a series of failures, Drizella's talents finally come through when she rescues Regina from a falling tower by smashing the concrete in mid-air using magic.
The book contains 13 chapters and an epilogue: #The Mayor of Happy #The City has Always Been a Happiness Project #The (Broken) Social Scene #How We Got Here #Getting it Wrong #How to be Closer #Convivialities #Mobilicities I: How Moving Feels, and Why It Does Not Feel Better #Mobilicities II: Freedom #Who Is The City For? #Everything Is Connected to Everything Else #Retrofitting Sprawl #Save Your City, Save Yourself Chapter 1. The Mayor of Happy The major, Enrique Penalosa, takes a stroll through his city and encounters many of his constituents with whom he shares intriguing conversation regarding the city itself. The overall consensus of the conversation is that if our needs are met, we can all live happy lives, but if the urban design fabric of city conflicts with our needs, it can impede on our happiness.

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