tiptoe
I think stroll a good choice- What could be more opposite than trudging up a snowy, sledding hill and strolling in the park?
No, trudge is a verb. I trudged my way through the snow.
There are NO proper nouns in the sentence, "The athletes must trudge through thick mud."A proper noun is the name or title of a specific person, place, or thing. Examples of the same sentence using proper nouns:Jack and Jim must trudge through thick mud. (specific people)The athletes must trudge through the Mud Hen Marsh.(specific place, in Ohio)
The antonym of the word 'synonym' is 'antonym'.
It means a walk, usually a long walk when you are feeling tired or overburdened.
slog, trek, hike
I think stroll a good choice- What could be more opposite than trudging up a snowy, sledding hill and strolling in the park?
The past tense of trudge is trudged.
I trudge throw the mud.
Will trudge.
No, trudge is a verb. I trudged my way through the snow.
They had to trudge through the murky water. I'm Michael Jackson. I trudge. Thank you very much ya'll!
Example sentence - She had a long trudge on her way to the gallows.
Will trudge.
The definition of the word trudge is to walk slowly with heavy steps often due to exhaustion or difficult surroundings. According to Merriam-Webster, the first known use of the word trudge was in 1547.
In the Vietnam War, America soldiers would often need to trudge back up the same hill where they had battled before.
to kill