to wade

listen to the pronunciation of to wade
Englisch - Türkisch
{f} yürüyerek geç

Tom ve Mary derin suyu yürüyerek geçti. - Tom and Mary waded out into the deep water.

suda yürümek
{f} çamurda yürümek
su veya çamur içinde güçlükle ilerlemek
geçmek
{i} güçlükle ilerleme
{i} çamurda yürüme
{f} sığ suda oynamak
{i} suda yürüme
{f} yürüyerek geçmek
{i} zorlukla yürüme
{f} zorla ilerlemek
{f} sığ suda/çamurda yürümek
Englisch - Englisch
A topographic surname
A male given name, transferred from the surname
to walk through water or something that impedes progress

After breakfast the men set out to hunt, while the women went to a large pool of warm water covered with a green scum and filled with billions of tadpoles. They waded in to where the water was about a foot deep and lay down in the mud. They remained there from one to two hours and then returned to the cliff.

{v} to walk in a substance that yields to the feet, to walk or go with difficulty
{i} family name; male first name
derived from the surname
An English surname, derived from the Old English for a ford
(1 syl ), to go through watery places, is the Anglo-Saxon wad (a ford), wadan (to ford or go [through a meadow]) (See Weyd-Monat ) General Wade, famous for his military highways in the Highlands, which proceed in a straight line up and down hill like a Roman road, and were made with a crown, instead of being lowest in the middle “Had you seen but these roads before they were made You would hold up your hands and bless General Wade ” Wade's Boat named Guingelot Wade was a hero of mediaeval romance, whose adventures were a favourite theme in the sixteenth century Mons F Michel has brought together all he could find about this story, but nevertheless, the tale is very imperfectly known “They can so mochë craft of Wadës hoot, So mochë broken harm whan that hem list, That with hem schuld I never ly v in rest ” Chaucer: Canterbury Tales, 9,298 Wadham College (Oxford) was founded by Nicholas Wadham in 1613
an act of wading
To pass or cross by wading; as, he waded &?;he rivers and swamps
English tennis player who won may women's singles titles (born in 1945)
Woad
To wade through a lot of documents or pieces of information means to spend a lot of time and effort reading them or dealing with them. It has taken a long time to wade through the `incredible volume' of evidence. American politician who served as a U.S. senator from Ohio (1851-1869) and jointly authored the Wade-Davis Manifesto (1864), which declared the primacy of Congress in matters of the Reconstruction. Barkley Charles Wade Hampton Wade Roe v. Wade Wade Benjamin Franklin Wade Davis Bill
English tennis player who won may women's singles titles (born in 1945) walk (through relatively shallow water); "Can we wade across the river to the other side?"; "Wade the pond
If you wade through something that makes it difficult to walk, usually water or mud, you walk through it. Rescuers had to wade across a river to reach them
{f} cross with difficulty; proceed slowly and with difficulty; walk in water, walk through any substance that impedes motion (snow, etc.)
to progress with difficulty
To walk in or through water or something else that similarly impedes normal movement ADVANCE \x 540
To walk along the bottom of a body of water, with the water no higher than chest-level
To walk in a substance that yields to the feet; to move, sinking at each step, as in water, mud, sand, etc
To walk in or through water or something else that similarly impedes normal movement
The act of wading
walk (through relatively shallow water); "Can we wade across the river to the other side?"; "Wade the pond"
To go; to move forward
{i} act or instance of walking in shallow water
Hence, to move with difficulty or labor; to proceed &?;lowly among objects or circumstances that constantly &?;inder or embarrass; as, to wade through a dull book
to wade
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