sledge

घण
definition
verb
the task of sledging lifeboats across tundra
carry (a load or passengers) on a sledge.
noun
Their guitars hammer away like sledges to anvils while the rhythm section is hot enough to melt steel!
a sledgehammer.
translation of 'sledge'
जड हातोडा,
लोहाराचा मोठा,
घण
example
We discovered that as we had gotten older, we'd gotten taller and larger to the point that sitting on a 'sledge' tends to make it sink into the snow rather than fly screaming towards the trees at the bottom.
a dog 'sledge'
a 'sledge' journey
She has had to pull a 60 lb 'sledge' across 200 miles in sub zero temperatures.
Go find a hammer: a claw, a 'sledge' , a ball-peen, whatever's handy.
To prepare she spent days pulling a loaded 'sledge' along the beach.
Scott himself, with Shackleton, made a 'sledge' journey to beyond 82 degrees south in 1902.
A lot of people were in the bar watching our 'sledge' trains come around over the sea ice as we pulled up at the field store hangar.
Steel wedges were driven into the fault and hammered with a 'sledge' until the stone separated.
He crawled, hands and knees, for two miles pulling a loaded 'sledge' .
All in all this car is probably safer than the estate we drive around in normally, which in comparison handles like a tractor pulling a 'sledge' full of sand.
We walked over to the 'sledge' ride and that's when the armband came in.
Tea trays, as we all know are ten times better than any 'sledge' or toboggan you can buy in the shops, and have the added advantage of being useful as giant frisbees when the snow melts.
The four adult and two baby animals will travel down from their home in the Cairngorm mountains of Scotland to pull the 'sledge' , laden with toys, around town.
The fishermen load the 'sledge' with their catch, and then lean on the crossbars, scooting the mud horse over the flats that would otherwise drag them down.
When Scott ordered the last of the dog teams back to base camp, the men pulled their heavy 'sledges' themselves using man-harnesses.
The whaling ship Terra Nova sailed from New Zealand in November 1910 and the expedition set off from base the following October, with mechanical 'sledges' , ponies and dogs.
Led by accomplished Polar explorer Jim McNeill, the group will pull 'sledges' weighing up to 250 lb for up to 10 hours a day 210 miles to the Magnetic Pole.
In 1901, Robert Scott left London and took a team with dogs and 'sledges' across part of Antarctica, and many important discoveries were made.
The competitors who travel by foot and skis pulling 'sledges' with supplies, will cover over 350 miles in four stages from Resolute Bay, Canada, to the North Magnetic Pole.
The Manchester University academic and a pal are heading to the Greenland Icecap on 'sledges' pulled by giant kites.
Another was 'sledged' almost halfway up Mount Taranaki, to provide accommodation for visitors.
At one stage our 'sledges' went over a small crevasse, the runners gliding silently over a snow-covered gap that opened up underneath it.
During their historic trek across the constantly moving ocean the women first pulled their 250 lb 'sledges' of food and equipment over house-sized pressure ridges of ice and sat out blizzards.
All the material for the house had to be 'sledged' up the hill by horse.
That afternoon we made our expedition 'sledging' flags.
Perhaps more importantly, he was one of the few British polar expedition members who appreciated the value of using dogs to haul 'sledges' .
In actual fact it was just a steep incline without any dangers from crevasses, but the incline was too much for the skidoos to pull the two heavy 'sledges' , now laden with many fossil and rock samples.
Children across York and North Yorkshire reached for their 'sledges' yesterday as a dusting of snow transformed much of the county into a winter wonderland.
The women have pulled 250 lb 'sledges' packed with food and equipment across the Arctic ice.
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