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66 Sentences With "tramped"

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

Dozens of policemen and soldiers tramped through the crime scene.
We tramped around the base of the falls and got very wet.
Then tramped through a few hundred meters of forest to get to the door.
He was speaking by telephone as he tramped up Canal Street in the rain.
In flats, heels and black leather sneakers, they tramped up a hill on a cloudy, blustery morning.
He had spent six weeks following indigenous men as they tramped through the wilderness, shooting arrows at wild pigs.
We slept on rusty cots, played dubious games with pocketknives, tramped around the island and jumped into its hidden coves.
We waved to Eeesh and the two roly-poly shadows beneath him as they tramped off to the bunny hill.
In the wake of the Panic of 1873, he lost his job at Vandalia and tramped to East St. Louis looking for work; then, homesick, he tramped back to Terre Haute, where, in 1875, he took a job as a labor organizer, and, later, as a magazine editor, for the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen.
Scraps of the same pink cloth tramped into the mud of a mass grave, human bones pushing through the seedling grass.
Every year, I tramped up Fifth Avenue with my schoolmates in the Salute to Israel parade, carrying homespun, glitter-adorned banners.
The point is that when debate gets closed down and nuance gets tramped underfoot and empathy gets battered to death we all lose.
Soldiers who tramped into remote valleys and dug tirelessly to search for survivors were hailed as heroes in a nationwide surge of unity.
They lifted and settled, flinched like dying nerves as Bobby tramped on them: the sky itself was the color of a shopping bag.
Around 274, a modern-day Thoreauvian, Roxanne Quimby, co-founder of Burt's Bees, started buying up the Maine acreage her literary hero often tramped.
The men tramped down the runway wearing a range of outfits, including sharp suits (wide lapels, flared pants) and billowing capes and tulle tutus.
On pavements where Soviet workers once tramped to shifts at the Uralmash heavy-machinery plant, babushkas now lay out their wares: apples, mushrooms, smoked fish.
Meanwhile, aggravated to be departing from the bar so soon, Stewart tramped down the staircase with Alfred, whom Stewart thought must be experiencing another emotional episode.
A group of young boys dressed in old-fashioned regimental uniforms tramped up a staircase and strode purposefully toward him, wooden rifles slung over their shoulders.
She became the "nanny photographer," the secretive self-taught genius who tramped around town with a Rolleiflex camera around her neck and her young charges in tow.
Tramped back into the spacecraft, they escaped into the air, from where the astronauts had little choice but to breathe them in and risk any potential health consequences.
For me, this realization came on the Richmond Alpine Track as I tramped through storm clouds so dense that I could rarely see more than 30 feet ahead.
Cyrus's death had received lots of media coverage, inside India and abroad, and thrill seekers had tramped through Malcha Mahal, taking video with their phones, hoping to see a ghost.
In January 2019, a clan of scientists and conservationists tramped through the torrid Indonesian forest in search of the Wallace's giant bee — a species that hadn't been spotted alive since 1981.
A pale blue sky showed through the forest's old-growth conifers—sugar and ponderosa pines, Douglas firs and incense cedars—as the researchers tramped over dry ground, carpeted with dead needles and cones.
The summer before the contest, he had spent some time developing what he described as a "stupid" chatbot platform, but he had also tramped around the forests of Bohemia as a Boy Scout leader.
The Macleans' private living room was cluttered with modern bric-a-brac while, just below, tourists tramped about in the stately banquet hall looking at clan paraphernalia and trying to locate a public toilet.
We added our skis and board to the collection and tramped in, collecting ceramic bowls of rustic roasted potatoes and lentil stew heavily fortified with meat, then pulled up chairs at the tables outside.
My nephews and son had grumbled a little about missing a day on the Atlantic beach, but fell silent as we tramped up the steep stairs to the balcony once reserved for enslaved people.
SIEM REAP, CAMBODIA — For decades, archaeologists here kept their eyes on the ground as they tramped through thick jungle, rice paddies and buffalo grazing fields, emerald green and soft with mud during the monsoon season.
But as Mr. Lunin, a penniless 60-year-old, tramped recently across an expanse of pristine snow studded with birch trees 3,500 miles east of Moscow, he rejoiced at the prospect of finally finding some satisfaction.
But if you piled into gold during that time, you got tramped the rest of the year, as it fell from a high of $23,300 an ounce in late January to a low just above $1,000 in December.
Five strokes later — including a bunker shot that skittered over the green and a dicey uphill pitch that mockingly rolled back to where he was standing — Spieth, his shoulders slumped, tramped from the hole with a triple bogey.
Instead, Mr. Shepard, who is 44 and rangy, tramped up a set of stairs outside the garage and unlocked the door to a cozy space with slate blue walls and the odd wire dangling from the slanted ceiling.
CreditCredit RAJAPUR, India — In the evening breeze on a stony hilltop a day's drive south of Mumbai, Sudhir Risbud tramped from one rock carving to another, pointing out the hull of a boat, birds, a shark, human figures and two life-size tigers.
As James walked up the tramped-earth path to the door, in his hands his present of a silver dish (wrapped in a length of muslin) to thank Mistress Brandon for having saved his life, he heard unlikely sounds inside the house: meaty thumps and a shrill cry.
Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn said in an interview with Deutschlandfunk radio that Turkey's verbal attacks and the way that "the rule of law and order in Turkey has been tramped on" after a failed coup in July meant there was nothing that could help bring the EU and Turkey together at the moment.
I'd booked the gig, so at the end of the night, we all tramped back to my friend Diana's house in West Philly and stayed up way too late quaffing the nice booze and red wine they'd magicked out of their van (a rare luxury for a couple of grubby college kids like us).
A United States Army Ceremony in France Last July, I spent a week in France as a historian for an Army commemoration of World War I. In the small French village of Fismette, several dozen American soldiers tramped across the old stone bridge dividing Fismette from Fismes, its neighboring town, gathering at the edge of the lazy-flowing Vesle River.
The track is now tramped by thousands of people every year.
We tramped and clumb around all over it, and by and by found a good big cavern in the rock, most up to the top on the side towards Illinois.
Strachan was later accused of being a "red-handed murderer who had tramped knee-deep in blood through New Guinea". He applied for protection from Lord Derby and subsequently no charges were laid.
William Lithgow William Lithgow (c. 1582 – c. 1645) was a Scottish traveller, writer and alleged spy. He claimed at the end of his various peregrinations to have tramped 36,000 miles (57,936km) on foot.
" When State troopers and Air Force personnel searched the woods, they reportedly found "absolutely nothing".E.g. AP article, Dec. 10: "State troopers and Air Force personnel tramped through the area for hours with Geiger counters. They said they found nothing and called off the search.
Posting or postadh (Scottish Gaelic) is a term formerly used in Scotland for a process in washing clothes. It means to trample with the feet, or the act of trampling or treading. In scouring woollen clothing, blankets or coarse linen, when the strength of the arms and manual friction are found insufficient, Highland women put them in a tub with a prop – or quantity of water, then, with petticoats tucked up, they began to "post", which they continued until every part of the clothes received an effectual cleansing. When three women were employed, one usually tramped in the middle, and the other two tramped around her.
Workers then tramped on the mud while straw was added to solidify the mold. The mudbricks were chemically suitable as fertilizer, leading to the destruction of many ancient Egyptian ruins, such as at Edfu. A well-preserved site is Amarna. Mudbrick use increased at the time of Roman influence.
He was apprenticed at age 12 to the newspaper, the Democrat in Cortland County, New York. Following a seven-year apprenticeship, he tramped around until his next protracted stay, with the Pittsburgh Chronicle. Around 1855, Locke started, with others, the Plymouth, Ohio Herald. On March 20, 1856, he became the editor of the Bucyrus Journal.
Born in Unley, South Australia, on 30 July 1913, Blight was educated at Brisbane State High School.Beatrice Davis (ed.), Australian Verse: An Illustrated Treasury, State Library of New South Wales Press, 1996. During the Great Depression in Australia he tramped the Queensland outback looking for work.William Wilde, Australian Poets and their Works, Oxford University Press, 1996.
He was educated at Medbury School and at Christ's College. His interest in art developed when he was 12 years old, while on holidays at the family farm. He tramped into the hills taking painting and sketching materials with him. Family friends encouraged him in his art and when he finished his education, he decided to go to art school.
Wool bales at the broker's store in 1900. Very early wool presses were made from wood boards and had a wire winch mechanism to compress the wool and also hollow logs where the wool was tramped into a pack. During the late 19th century various forms of wooden wool press became the standard. Most popular models were the Koerstz and the Ferrier.
Several accounts of the incident describe Fiscus kicking the Jeannette player in the face. However, the Pittsburgh Press reported that Fiscus had tripped the player and "purposely tramped on his neck." Either way, Jeannette immediately petitioned the referee to expel Fiscus from the game, meanwhile Greensburg defended Fiscus' actions. The arguments continued through to the second half of the game.
One cutting is an approximately 30 cm long cut from the stem containing seven or eight nodes. This is then planted in the field with a spacing of about 40 cm. The field is beforehand prepared by flooding it to a depth of 3 to 5 cm. The soil itself is tramped into a liquid mud so that the cuttings can root easily.
During the first half was of the Jeannete game Fiscus got into an altercation with an unknown Jeannette player. Several accounts of the incident describe Fiscus kicking the Jeannette player in the face. However, the Pittsburgh Press reported that he tripped the guy and "purposely tramped on his neck." Either way Jeannette immediately petitioned the referee to expel Fiscus from the game, while Greensburg defended Fiscus' actions.
Everywhere was > the cry, 'There is no bread. We are dying'. This cry came from every part of > Russia, from the Volga, Siberia, White Russia, the North Caucasus, and > Central Asia. I tramped through the black earth region because that was once > the richest farmland in Russia and because the correspondents have been > forbidden to go there to see for themselves what is happening.
He quickly left the house and tramped six miles of snowy roads to Exhampton. There was no sign of life in Trevelyan's house. A back window was broken in and the light was burning – and there, on the floor, was the body of Trevelyan. Inspector Narracott took the case in hand, and after wandering through a maze of false clues and suspects, he ultimately discovered the murderer of Captain Trevelyan. Mrs.
He was a roving instructor, traveling through the frontier of Ohio, Kentucky, and western Pennsylvania. He was "one of an army of half-educated young men who tramped the roads and trails drumming up 'subscription scholars'." These half-educated young men would travel to and from different settlements looking for a part-time teaching job. They would teach in log-cabins to children whose parents would pay for their education.
Richard S. Ewell to return to their native county to find forage and harass Federals operating in the county. The following day they reached the southern portion of the county whereupon they learned of the formation of the Loudoun Rangers a month prior and their presence at Waterford. That evening, with about half of his command, White tramped off the main roads through fields and forests to Waterford, evading the Ranger's pickets.
It is said she was treated by her stepmother with coarseness and brutality. One morning, Emilia slipped stealthily away with all her few worldly possessions. For days it is said, this descendant of Scotland's proudest nobles tramped aimlessly through the country, sleeping in barns or craving the shelter of the humblest cottage, and, when her money was exhausted, even begging from door to door. At last she came across a Farmer who invited her to make her home with them.
They set Reynolds and the artist John Frampton Watson on shore, where they tramped for the next two years. In 1832, the United States frigate Potomac, under Commodore John Downes, arrived. The ship had been ordered to the coast of Sumatra to avenge an attack on an American ship, Friendship, of Salem, Massachusetts, and was returning home in what became a circumnavigation of the globe. Reynolds joined Downes as his private secretary for the trip and wrote a book about the experience.
Martin tramped the streets of Southwark in a ragged frock coat helping the poor of the borough, lodging in the same small cell-like room for 48 years and subsisting mainly on bread and margarine. Having lived for many years in apparent penury, on his death left a considerable estate, leaving £1000 to St John's College to provide assistance for students from Cornwall reading for Holy Orders and the residue to the Bishop of Southwark and the Mayor for the poor of that borough.
Head of a moth with its proboscis laden with seven pairs of pollinia from Orchis pyramidalis During 1861, botany became a preoccupation for Darwin, and his projects became serious scientific pursuits. He continued his study of orchids throughout the summer, writing to anyone who might be able to supply specimens he had not yet examined., from The Correspondence of Charles Darwin, volume 9: 1861 (pub 1994) Field naturalists, botanists, and country gentry sent specimens from across the British Isles. Darwin also tramped around the countryside with tin cans and biscuit boxes, collecting specimens which his gardeners potted up for him.
In doing so it was realised that the sand resulting from the weathering of granite, so-called granitgrus, if it was thoroughly tramped down, produced a very good seal. The Oderteich in winter. Right: the control hut (Striegelhaus) on the dam In 1712, the deputy chief miner (Vizebergmeister), Caspar Dannenberger, wrote two letters to the Clausthal Mining Office, in which he proposed the construction of the Oderteich dam, sealed with granitic sand, as well as two embankments made of granite blocks.Dannenberger, Caspar. Letters to the Clausthal Mining Office (Bergamt Clausthal) dated 24 December 1712 and 27 February 1713, Niedersächsisches Bergarchiv Clausthal.
The desire to begin researching the history of Halloween germinated during a college semester abroad in Austria in 1999 as she tramped through the leaves in the Vienna Woods and noticed people celebrating All Saints' Day (also called All Hallows) and All Souls' Day. Halloween had always been a time of fun, but its history now intrigued her. Lawrence continued her research on cultures and traditions of Halloween when she returned to BYU, gathering a large collection of books and articles to study further after she graduated. Favorite researchers include professor of folklore Jack Santino and Halloween expert Lesley Bannatyne Lawrence was asked by Bannatyne to make comments about Halloween music to be included in her book, Halloween Nation: Behind the Scenes of America’s Fright Night.
During this 20-year period, both Gerhard Mueller and George John Roberts attempted to employ Douglas full-time at the survey department, but he instead sent in voluntary reports and maps of the rugged Westland valleys that he tramped and explored and earned a part-time wage while exploring for the department. In 1868, Douglas accompanied Julius von Haast on a month-long expedition travelling down the West Coast, making stops and exploring at: Ōkārito, Bruce Bay, Paringa and Arnott Point before returning to Ōkārito. It is probable that Douglas learned something of geology from Haast at this time because he used Haast's terminology in his later geological notes. During 1874, Douglas met George Roberts and formed a friendship that was to lead to his growing involvement with the New Zealand Survey Department.
He visited Bayard Taylor at Gotha and en route visited the galleries at Dresden, tramped through Saxony, Switzerland, studied Bohemian life at Prague, passed through the Black Forest region, saw the toymakers of Nuremberg, continued the tramp through the pleasant region of the Thüringerwald and finally reached Göttingen, where he took up his studies at the University of Göttingen. However, with the outbreak of the American Civil War he left the university without graduating to return home to serve in the Union Army. Captured after the Battle of Cedar Creek near Middletown, Virginia, George H. Putnam was held for a short time at the notorious Libby Prison in Richmond, Virginia before being transferred to Danville where he was held until March 1865 when he was returned to the Union forces as part of a prisoner exchange. He attained the rank of major of volunteers.
In December 1934 he rebuked the veteran Conservative MP Nancy Astor when she referred to Merthyr as having "no social consciousness or initiative to do anything". Davies replied: "I object to irresponsible and brutal charges coming from people whose knowledge is derived from the enjoyment of vast wealth, especially when I am not certain that they have made their contribution towards producing that wealth". In 1934, two years after his wife Margaret's death from cancer, Davies married Sephora Davies, a schoolteacher from Gwaun-Cae-Gurwen in Carmarthenshire who shared Davies's political outlook. The couple lived at Gwynfryn Park Terrace in Merthyr Tydfil, and had two sons. In November 1936, having been returned in the 1935 general election with an increased majority, Davies ridiculed the prime minister, Stanley Baldwin, for his refusal to meet a delegation from the National Unemployed Workers' Movement's 1936 Hunger March, which included a large contingent from South Wales: "A bigger man would meet these people who have tramped the roads of this country and would show that he had sympathy with them".

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