traipse

orang jorok
definition
verb
students had to traipse all over Washington to attend lectures
walk or move wearily or reluctantly.
noun
But the Japanese site looked so interesting, that I had a traipse around it.
a tedious or tiring journey on foot.
He continued to rub his hands all over my body like I was some traipse with a sign on her head flashing ‘I want you, I need you, oh baby, oh baby’.
a slovenly woman.
translation of 'traipse'
verb
berjalan dgn lesu
noun
orang jorok,
perjalanan yg meletihkan
example
But the Japanese site looked so interesting, that I had a 'traipse' around it.
The long 'traipse' across the North York Moors had taken its toll.
Deciding that they need some sort of food, they 'traipse' off in the direction of the shop, still giggling to themselves.
One dancer's 'traipse' over a billowing canopy suggested a walk on the moon; another's gymnastics under running water was both dreamlike and unsettling.
He continued to rub his hands all over my body like I was some 'traipse' with a sign on her head flashing ‘I want you, I need you, oh baby, oh baby’.
But this week, to my amazement, a man of perhaps Arab origin stood on the left, blocking the 'traipse' of climbers.
Those of us who've tried it know that it's quick and convenient and, much easier to search for bargains on the Net than it is to 'traipse' from shop to shop looking for that special something.
students had to 'traipse' all over Washington to attend lectures
students had to 'traipse' all over London to attend lectures
Our students would have to 'traipse' all over the country to get this calibre of law school education in southern Canada.
No debit accounts then of course, just a 'traipse' around the city collecting small bundles of fivers.
Few people have the time to 'traipse' around galleries and exhibitions, while several works carry price tags that put them beyond the financial reach of mere mortals.
It seems to me that people would rather 'traipse' round shops, gawping at potential purchases than they would educate themselves by looking at a book or work of art.
A quick 'traipse' around the site reveals it's no hoax, parody or spoof.
The months spent poring over bridal magazines, 'traipsing' through wedding dress shops, visiting caterers and choosing stationery can take their toll.
The large mixed groups of only 10 years ago aren't 'traipsing' around anymore during the daytime, during the weekdays.
Both of us were travelling and it was difficult to leave your partner and go 'traipsing' around the world.
As it turned out there happened to be five of them and I was 'traipsed' on up to the casualty unit.
Still, it can get wearying, being given optimistically sized underwear and too-tight tops again, and 'traipsing' back to the returns desk with them year after year.
You can lose yourself for quite some time in the painted purples, reds and ochres of the outback before 'traipsing' through to the adjacent Museum of Western Australia.
Sinking into her comforter, I stared at the ceiling; pictured her in Italy, 'traipsing' along the same ancient streets her great grandmother Nana had walked before she immigrated to America.
If 'traipsing' around the shops fills you with as much excitement as hobbling around in a pair of tight shoes, then perhaps something more relaxing might be in order.
Heads held high, they go 'traipsing' through town - grace unmatched.
I somehow thought I was home free after I'd eaten and 'traipsed' off in the general direction of my art class, but a hand on my wrist stopped me.
Now he's 'traipsing' around the country with a proposal to allow verdicts in criminal trials with less than unanimous juries.
Obviously he didn't want another student 'traipsing' around and telling him what to do.
The stranger came out, and he had a wonderfully bright smile, and asked us where we were going - a not inappropriate question, I thought, since we were 'traipsing' in his property.
And so, 'traipsing' around in jeans and T-shirts, it was my sister and I who were in the minority, surrounded by locals - from octogenarians to newborns - in garments of every hue in the rainbow.
To find one - let alone shoot it - you have to go 'traipsing' about the Latvian forests in the dead of night, imitating the cock bird's mating call.
I read an article that the original script was one in which the two characters spent a madcap weekend 'traipsing' around Europe and end up getting married in the end.
Credits: Google Translate