Trudging

  • 121tottering — Synonyms and related words: Lissajous figure, alternation, ambling, ambulation, anile, back and forth, backpacking, cautious, circumspect, claudicant, collapsing, coming and going, crabbed, crawling, creeping, creeping like snail, debilitated,… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 122tramping — Synonyms and related words: ambling, ambulation, backpacking, footing, footing it, footwork, going on foot, hiking, hitchhiking, hitching, hoofing, legwork, lumbering, marching, pedestrianism, perambulation, sauntering, staggering, strolling,… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 123turtlelike — Synonyms and related words: ambling, cautious, circumspect, claudicant, crawling, creeping, creeping like snail, deliberate, easy, faltering, flagging, foot dragging, gentle, gradual, halting, hobbled, hobbling, idle, indolent, languid,… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 124unhurried — Synonyms and related words: ambling, calm, casual, cautious, circumspect, claudicant, crawling, creeping, creeping like snail, deliberate, dilatory, easy, easygoing, faltering, flagging, foot dragging, gentle, gradual, halting, hasteless, hobbled …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 125walking — Synonyms and related words: ambling, ambulant, ambulation, ambulative, ambulatory, backpacking, circuit riding, expeditionary, footing, footing it, footwork, globe girdling, globe trotting, going, going on foot, hiking, hitchhiking, hitching,… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 126walking — (Roget s IV) modif. Syn. on foot, afoot, strolling, rambling, trudging, hiking, ambulant, touring, ambling, sauntering, tramping, marching, pRomenading, passing, roaming, wandering, wayfaring, trekking*, on shank s mare*, mushing* …

    English dictionary for students

  • 127John Bosco — (1815–1888)    Saint and founder of the Society of St. Francis De Sales, known as the Salesians. John Bosco was known as the “Dreaming Saint” because of his frequent lucid dreams, more like out of body travels, in which he encountered angels,… …

    Encyclopedia of Demons and Demonology

  • 128pad — {{11}}pad (n.) 1550s, bundle of straw to lie on, possibly from Low Ger. or Flem. pad sole of the foot. Meaning cushion like part of an animal foot is from 1836 in English. Generalized sense of something soft is from c.1700; the sense of a number… …

    Etymology dictionary