To walk or march with labor; to jog along; to move wearily.
of Trudge
'Trudging' means to walk slowly and with heavy steps, typically due to exhaustion or difficulty. It can also convey a sense of weariness or lack of enthusiasm in one's movements.
It means walking slowly and with heavy steps.
For example : A long and tiring walk
trudging is a slow laborious or wearisome walk
There is nothing wrong with your phrase, trudging through, trudging across, trudging around - and so on.
Whenever I wake up every morning, I trudge down the steps.
the aras
slish slosh!
use a thesaurus. strolling, wandering, marching, trudging, rambling, toddle stepping, hiking
You need to be weary of that guy, I don't really trust him. John was weary from trudging around the shops all day......
I think stroll a good choice- What could be more opposite than trudging up a snowy, sledding hill and strolling in the park?
sledding is cosidered excersize. in the winter you can't run through the snow. sledding, trudging through the snow and throwing snowballs is a way to excersize.
Here is a sentence with the word 'dog':The stray dog look at me with its mournful eyes, before turning away and trudging down the empty, dark alley.
Adjectives that describe locomotives include large, heavy, and powerful. They could also be described as noisy, or by the present participle adjectives "trudging" or "barreling" depending on their motion.
Because trudging is a certain kind of walking. It's descriptive; mood-setting; and is a subcategory of the more general term "walking."
Jonas kept trudging up the steep hill because he wanted to see what was over the hill and if something was different and if he could change things.