sledding / ˈslɛd ɪŋ /
💦中学词汇雪橇雪橇运动雪撬雪橇活动
sledding 的定义
n. 名词 noun- the state of the ground permitting use of a sled: The mountain roads offer good sledding.
- the going, or kind of travel, for sleds, as determined by ground and weather conditions.
- a going, progress, or advance in any field: The job won't be easy sledding.
- the act of conveying or riding on a sled.
更多sledding例句
- Brian Pilcher gave up running at Dartmouth College after a sledding accident, he said, because he was more interested in partying and surfing.
- Norton said sledding could be done safely by allowing only children and accompanying adults on the Capitol grounds.
- It’s heavy sledding, but here are a few of the highlights I took from it.
- That incorporates all of the happiness—beaches, sledding, love—and pain—war, death, loneliness.
- Joe Biden doesn't know what those answers will be, so he faces uphill sledding.
- Another group, Mush for the Cure, which ran dog-sledding events, was also asked to change its name, the group says on its website.
- He also writes academic medical articles that are at times pretty tough sledding.
- He takes them to man movies I don't want to see, he takes them for sword fights in the park or sledding in the snow.
- It might be expected to continue without intermission for two or three weeks, and would make a quick end of the sledding.
- Roller skating and hoop rolling, as well as sledding, are all valuable recreations.
- Then the snow came, but it was a greater success in the inland towns, and there were sledding and sleigh-riding.
- And had it not been discovered, they might have found what Giraffe would call “rougher sledding” later on.
- Ideas always have to go begging at first, and the greater the idea the rougher the sledding.