Pronunciation of the English word trod.
# | Sentence | |
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1. | The dog gave a yelp when I trod on its paw. | |
2. | He trod on my foot on purpose in the train. | |
3. | Today, after riding, while grooming the horse I carelessly got my right foot trod on. | |
4. | There was once a girl who trod on a loaf to avoid soiling her shoes, and the misfortunes that happened to her in consequence are well known. | |
5. | When she came to the place where the footpath led across the moor, she found small pools of water, and a great deal of mud, so she threw the loaf into the mud, and trod upon it, that she might pass without wetting her feet. | |
6. | Go risk your head and think a thought which until now no one has had; go risk your step and walk a path which until now no one has trod; so that Man may build himself, and not be made by anyone or anything else. | |
7. | Go risk your head and think a thought which now no one has had yet; go risk your step and walk a way which now no one has trod yet; that Man may build himself, and not be made by other objects. | |
8. | In the two years he spent as a professor of Spanish in Paris, he trod a dangerous path with the French authorities. | |
9. | He carried the grapes in baskets, threw them into the wine-press, trod them, and then helped to draw off the wine into the jars; while she prepared food for the grape-gatherers, and brought them some wine of the previous year so that they might quench their thirst. | |
10. | Eurydice, shortly after her marriage, while wandering with the nymphs, her companions, was seen by the shepherd Aristæus, who was struck with her beauty and made advances to her. She fled, and in flying trod upon a snake in the grass, was bitten in the foot, and died. |