ya mum
Don't tread on me! To tread upon the ground. Many people tread on he sidewalk each day.
i just tread along the long way
In general, to tread is to walk. Here are some sentences:The boys would tread lightly as the went past the spooky old house at night.The clean up crew had to tread carefully as they made their way through the cluttered house of the hoarder.Those are uses of the verb tread. The word tread can be a noun, like the step on a staircase. Example sentences are here:The second tread on the old stair creaked noisily as the woman stepped on it.The tread on the tire was worn dangerously thin, and this may have contributed to the crash.
Walk , ambulate or trample .
i think its called a tread
head ahead mead instead bead tread
Chances are you have a rock(S) stuck in your rear tire tread. pry it out.
tread
Don't tread on me! To tread upon the ground. Many people tread on he sidewalk each day.
As a verb, tread means the way someone is walking. As a noun, tread can mean the top of a stair (where you step on), or the tread of a tire.
Tread - πέλματος
Sarah Boone invented the first ironing board. Elijah McCoy invented the portable ironing board, tire tread, and the lawn sprinkler.
Sarah Boone invented the first ironing board. Elijah McCoy invented the portable ironing board, tire tread, and the lawn sprinkler.
There are many. To list some... Ahead Cycad Dread Gonad Iliad Salad Squad Stead Tread Triad Plead Bread Broad
When they show excessive wear at tread or sides or when they show signs of cracking below tread or on sidewalls When they show excessive wear at tread or sides or when they show signs of cracking below tread or on sidewalls When they show excessive wear at tread or sides or when they show signs of cracking below tread or on sidewalls When they show excessive wear at tread or sides or when they show signs of cracking below tread or on sidewalls When they show excessive wear at tread or sides or when they show signs of cracking below tread or on sidewalls
Tread width is the distance from front to back on a stair tread, parallel to the length of your foot which you place on the tread, unless you walk duck style. Typical tread widths range between 9-12".
The homophone of "tread" is "tred."