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Well, honey, "ambled home" is a verb phrase, not a subject or predicate on its own. In the sentence "He ambled home," "he" is the subject and "ambled home" is the predicate. So, in short, "ambled home" is just strutting its stuff as a verb phrase, not trying to be something it's not.
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We ambled along as we talked.
They ambled down the road.
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I silently slunk away as the bear ambled toward the bee hive.
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The old coot ambled along, taking his own sweet time.
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Yes, ambled is a verb (the past tense of amble). It means to walk at a slow pace; stroll.
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The root word of ambled is "amble," which comes from the Old French word "ambler," meaning "to walk at a slow, relaxed pace."
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Ambled, strolled, paced, promenaded, sauntered and perambulated.
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The word "ambled" is simply a past-tense verb like walked. Here is an example on how to use the word "ambled."
She ambled along the side of the road.
We will amble along the sidewalk, without purpose.
Everyday, old man Duncan would amble along the seashore, looking for inspiration, for his painting was unfinished, and had been for ten years.
Sometimes I amble around the caves, looking for the tiger that my brother said lived in.
I like to get up early on vacation and amble along the beach.
Sara walked in an amble fashion.
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The loving couple happily ambled together under the sunset. To amble is a verb.
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Walking slowly and leisurely or strolling with the suggestion that time and direction were not important. It is also a particular gait of a horse when both legs on the same side move together.
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Ambled is a verb meaning walked slowly and leisurely.
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An "amble" is a gentle stroll where you take your time to enjoy the surroundings as you go from one place to another. An unhurried or leisurely walk.
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advanced
argued
amassed
armed
anguished
asked
ameliorated
altered
aligned
awoke
abandoned
ambled
ambushed
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The propinquity of their offices led to a close working relationship between the two teams.
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only does not begin with an a there for there can be no sentence with only starting with an a because only starts with a o.
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Strode, waltzed, paced (i guess), stomped, ran, strolled, stumbled
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A good sentence with the word "slowly." o(^_~)d
"The apprehensive, timorous child ambled slowlytowards the, mystifying, perplexing and eerie entity..."
Hope this worked!! <(^0^<)
Peace. ^_^
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When John took Amanda to her first ball his behavior was very dignified.
The German Shepherd ambled down the room, holding its head up in a dignified, confident manner.
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ambled, balled, called, dolled, felled, galled, hailed, jailed, killed, lolled, mauled, nailed, palled, railed, sailed, tailed, veiled, wailed, yelled, titled
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stroll saunter ramble limp lurch stride pace meander wander roam stray hike march promenade trek waddle gallivant amble jaunt
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In cathedrals starting in the Romanesque era and continuing into the Gothic period radiating chapels were sometimes constructed around the ambulatory end and the transept of the church. They were usually semicircular outcroppings where relics could be viewed as pilgrims "ambled" along the ambulatory. Resembling a niche although larger in size.
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intr.v., -bled, -bling, -bles.
n.
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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern A-B-ED. That is, six letter words with 1st letter A and 3rd letter B and 5th letter E and 6th letter D. In alphabetical order, they are:
ambled
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Some metaphors in "The Ransom of Red Chief" include the description of Red Chief as "a little ginger-haired cuss" which suggests he is mischievous, and the comparison of his father, Ebenezer Dorset, to a "two-spot cowboy," implying he is not very successful or intimidating. Also, the phrase "the minutes ambled along" uses personification to make time seem slow and dragging.
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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 2 words with the pattern -MB-ED. That is, six letter words with 2nd letter M and 3rd letter B and 5th letter E and 6th letter D. In alphabetical order, they are:
ambled
imbued
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there are other ways of saying walked such as:
lurched
lumbered
ran
hopped
skipped
ambled
trudged
float
raced
toddle
tripped
leaped
paraded
paced
rolled
wander
sneak
strolled
shuffle
bolted
saunter
strut
trooped
pranced
danced
marched
plod
tip toed
glide
slogged
raced
slithered
sprinted
jogged
jumped
crept
rushed
hiked
stalked
roamed
There are loads
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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern AMB-ED. That is, six letter words with 1st letter A and 2nd letter M and 3rd letter B and 5th letter E and 6th letter D. In alphabetical order, they are:
ambled
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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern A-BLED. That is, six letter words with 1st letter A and 3rd letter B and 4th letter L and 5th letter E and 6th letter D. In alphabetical order, they are:
ambled
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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern -MBLED. That is, six letter words with 2nd letter M and 3rd letter B and 4th letter L and 5th letter E and 6th letter D. In alphabetical order, they are:
ambled
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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 9 words with the pattern A--LED. That is, six letter words with 1st letter A and 4th letter L and 5th letter E and 6th letter D. In alphabetical order, they are:
addled
aisled
ambled
aneled
angled
ankled
argled
ariled
avaled
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I think some of the synonyms would be:
Advance, amble, ambulate, canter, escort, exercise, file, foot, go, go on foot, hike, hit the road, hoof it, knock about, lead, leg, lumber, March, Meander, pace, pad, parade, patrol, perambulate, plod, prance, promenade, race, roam, rove, saunter, scuff, shamble, Shuffle, slog, Stalk, step, stroll, stride, Strut, stump, take a walk, toddle, tramp, travel on foot, traverse, tread, troop, trek, trudge, wander, wend ones way
All i can really think of right now :)
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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 57 words with the pattern --B-ED. That is, six letter words with 3rd letter B and 5th letter E and 6th letter D. In alphabetical order, they are:
ambled
babied
bibbed
bobbed
buboed
cabbed
cabled
cobbed
cubbed
dabbed
debted
dibbed
dobbed
dubbed
fabled
fibbed
fibred
fobbed
fubbed
gabbed
gabled
gibbed
gobbed
hobbed
hoboed
imbued
inbred
jabbed
jibbed
jobbed
kebbed
libbed
lobbed
mobbed
mobled
nabbed
nebbed
nibbed
nubbed
pubbed
rebred
ribbed
robbed
rubbed
rubied
sabbed
sabled
sabred
sobbed
subbed
tabbed
tabled
tabued
tubbed
unbred
webbed
webfed
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Most writers on the web using the term "exact verb" are referring to a more precise, descriptive verb that does not need modifiers to qualify it. For example, "the boy walked slowly to school" vs. "the boy sauntered (or dawdled or ambled) to school."
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Words that start with a
apple
applesauce
ape
animal
accident
actor
abandon
about
abound
abrupt
abs
abutter
abyss
accept
access
annoying
accounting
accuse
ache
acknowledgedly
acorn
acre
add
amen
adverse
advertise
agent
ahoy
alcohol
alive
alp
amp
anchor
anger
announcer
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Gravity does not have a color because it is a fundamental force of nature that cannot be seen or visually perceived. It is simply a force that acts between objects with mass, causing them to be attracted to each other.
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The sundial has many advantages and disadvantages.
its main advantage is that it does not require any electricity power it .its also easy to make and is one of the simplest clock.
However it has numerous disadvantages as well.It can not be used at night because without the sunshine the sundail will be useless.Another problem is that it has to be kept outside and can not be worn on the wrist.
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Designed and set correctly, the sundial is not only one of the simplest clocks but also perhaps the most accurate and reliable. The angle of the traditional type's triangular "gnomon" has to suit the latitude in which it will be used, although the calculation is not difficult (I think from memory it is actually the angle of latitude but I stand to be corrected); and of course the dial has to be aligned correctly and usually with respect to local noon! Night-time... well, yes, but they tend not to work very well in cloudy weather either!
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It does not have to be kept outside, as long as it's in sunlight for long enough each day to be useful. There is a type that consists of a black screen with a specially-shaped slit in it, mounted on a window. There are other sun-dial designs not suitable for leaving out in all weathers. If you were to use a sun-dial only for verifying mechanical clocks it need be useable only for a couple of hours or so a day, around a set time like mid-day.
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Oh, and another advantage - made properly, with appropriate materials, a sun-dial could last for centuries.... notwithstanding Continental Drift necessitating re-calibration every few decades if you are fussy enough! (Oh yes! The Greenwich Meridian's physical marker line is slightly away from its local noon because the European Continent has ambled NE at its roughly 20mm/year average velocity since the meridian was established, hence the move to UTC when very accurate trans-world time-keeping is necessary.)
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You say it can't be worn on the wrist. That's very true, but sort of conversely you can use an analogue wrist-watch as an approximate compass when the Sun is visible.
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According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 222 words with the pattern A---E-. That is, six letter words with 1st letter A and 5th letter E. In alphabetical order, they are:
abased
abaser
abases
abated
abater
abates
abcees
abeles
abided
abider
abides
aboded
abodes
aboves
abused
abuser
abuses
acater
acates
accrew
achier
acider
ackees
acknew
aculei
acumen
acuter
acutes
adages
adawed
addeem
addies
addled
addles
adobes
adored
adorer
adores
aeried
aerier
aeries
aesces
aether
affeer
affied
affies
affret
afreet
agapes
agates
agaves
agazed
agenes
aggies
agiler
agoges
agones
agreed
agrees
aidmen
aiglet
aigret
airier
airmen
airned
airted
aisled
aisles
aizles
akatea
akenes
alated
alates
alayed
aleyed
aleyes
alined
aliner
alines
aliped
alkies
allees
allied
allies
almner
alpeen
althea
aludel
alures
amated
amates
amazed
amazes
ambeer
ambled
ambler
ambles
amened
amices
amides
amines
amises
amoles
amoret
amoved
amoves
ampler
amulet
amused
amuser
amuses
anadem
ancles
aneled
aneles
angled
angler
angles
animes
anises
ankled
ankles
anklet
anodes
anoles
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anteed
anthem
anther
antler
antres
anuses
apemen
apexes
apices
apnoea
apodes
apogee
apozem
apples
applet
appley
arames
arched
archei
archer
arches
arcked
arcsec
aredes
arenes
aretes
argled
argles
argued
arguer
argues
arider
ariled
arisen
arises
armies
armlet
arsier
artier
arties
ashier
ashkey
ashler
ashmen
asides
asleep
atabeg
atabek
atokes
atoned
atoner
atones
atweel
atween
auklet
aulder
aunter
auspex
autoed
avaled
avales
avider
avised
avises
avized
avizes
avocet
avoset
avowed
avower
avoyer
avyzed
avyzes
awaked
awaken
awakes
awarer
awayes
awheel
awnier
awoken
axemen
axised
axises
axites
axones
axseed
ayries
azalea
azides
azines
azoles
azoted
azotes
azures
azymes
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In the novel "Tuck Everlasting" by Natalie Babbitt, some key vocabulary words include immortal, enigmatic, and melancholy. These words are used throughout the book to describe the characters, themes, and setting. As for specific pages where these words appear, it would vary depending on the edition and formatting of the book. I recommend using a digital version with a search function to easily locate instances of these vocabulary words.
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London, as I stepped off the early morning Monday train I looked around at the unpleasant surroundings that represented this opinionated city. The sun had yet to come out allowing the moon to glow dully over London.
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My first sightings were of the thickness of the smoke lowering down from chimney-pots, making a soft black drizzle, with flakes of soot in it as large as full-grown snow-flakes some might say. There were horses, scarcely better; trampling all over the cobbled streets that were emptied the few people who were covered in an unmistakable filth. You could faintly make out the figure of the silhouetted shapes of the poor lying drunk against the decrepit wall of a shop but what most surprised me was the rancid smell that hung impenetrably low in the air.
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As I ambled further into the heart of London I noted the people stopping dead and turning to face me, their pale white faces looking painfully scared. I quickened my pace trying not to notice the darkening clouds hanging heavily above my bowed head. Chimney sweepers seemed transfixed as their hazy eyes followed me until I had been swallowed up by the fog of London. I was now shuffling over London Bridge subconsciously over time becoming more and more aware of the stillness of the City. I could faintly hear the crash of the waves ticking irritatingly at the back of mind. I could picture the murky waters raging wildly underneath me waiting for the chance to suck me into an endless blackness.
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The cracked cobbled streets had now metamorphosed into a sticky earthly ground which was freshly drenched with the heavy rain that had begun to pour out of the open skies. I wondered if the town's people had started to disperse but they stood firmly: unwashed, unshaven, not even noticing the ground that was covered, nearly ankle-deep, with filth and mire. Even the horses seemed paralysed as they stood their ground trumpeting the storm, welcoming it as if it was a blessing.
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Warwick Lane. I read the sign to my left but noticed an alleyway running through the middle of the street. There in the dying candle light of the lamp were children, 3 or 4, aged 5 to 6, sitting there in the hardening rain playing with the damp soot that was dipping from the rooftops. I stood there for a while allowing the amazement of the sight before me to sink in. I inched forward reaching out believing what I was seeing wasn't real. Underneath me a stick snapped. In the thundering weather the snap was almost soundless but it was enough for the children to see me and retreat to their derelict homes. Their mothers welcomed the children hastily inside then turned their expressionless faces towards me. I watched as the paleness greeted their skin and spread throughout their bodies. The mouths began to quiver, the arms began to shake, and the eyes looked lifeless and empty. The children- who only a few minutes ago were playing in the filth- hid behind the legs of their mothers, penetrating their eyes directly on me. Awkwardly I turned to face the long raunchy road, Warwick Lane.
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Warwick lane, deserted.
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2 of every unclean (according to Jewish law) and 7 of every clean animal.
Genesis 7:2 states: "Take with you seven of every kind of clean animal, a male and its mate, and two of every kind of unclean animal, a male and its mate"
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ambled angled annulled babbled baffled barreledbarrelled battled beveled bevelled bobbled boggledboodled bottled bridled brindled bristled bubbledbuckled bugled bundled bungled burgled bustledcaballed cabled cackled canceled cancelled candledcapsuled caroled castled channeled channelled chiseledchiselled chortled chuckled circled cobbled coddledcounseled counselled coupled crackled cradled crinkledcrippled crumbled crumpled cuckold cuddled cudgeledcudgelled culled curdled cycled dabbled dandleddangled dappled dawdled dazzled deviled devilleddialed dialled diddled dimpled Donald doodleddoubled doweled dowelled dribbled driveled drivelleddrizzled dueled duelled dulled dwindled equaledequalled fabled fiddled fizzled fondled frazzledfreckled frizzled fuddled fueled fumbled funneledfunnelled gabbled gabled gambled gamboled garbledgargled gaveled gavelled gentled giggled girdledgobbled goggled grappled graveled grizzled groveledgrovelled grumbled gulled gurgled guzzled hackledhaggled handled handseled hassled heckled heraldhobbled huddled hulled humbled hurdled hurtledhustled idled jangled jeweled jewelled jiggledjingled joggled jostled juggled jumbled kibbledkindled knuckled labeled labelled ladled leveledlevelled libeled libelled lulled mangled mantledmarbled marshaled marshalled martialed martialled marveledmarvelled measled meddled mewled mingled modeledmodelled mottled muddled muffled mulled mumbledmuscled muzzled needled nestled nettled nibbledniggled nuzzled ogled paddled paneled panelledparceled parcelled pebbled pedaled pedalled peddledpenciled pencilled peopled periled petaled petalledpickled piddled pimpled pommeled pommelled portaledportalled prattled prickled pummeled pummelled purledpuzzled quarreled quarrelled quibbled raffled rambledrankled rattled raveled ravelled reveled revelledribald riddled riffled rifled rippled rivaledrivalled ruffled rumbled rumpled rustled saddledsampled scaffold scheduled scrabbled scrambled scribbledscrupled scuffled sculled scuttled sembled settledshackled shambled shingled shoveled shovelled shriveledshrivelled shuffled shuttled sickled sidled signaledsignalled singled sizzled smuggled sniffled sniveledsnivelled snorkeled snuffled snuggled spangled sparkledspeckled spiraled spiralled sprinkled squabbled squiggledstabled stapled startled steepled stenciled stencilledstifled stippled stoppled straddled straggled strangledstruggled stumbled suckled swaddled swindled swiveledswivelled tabled tackled tangled tasseled tasselledtattled throttled tickled tingled tinkled tippledtitled toddled toiled toppled totaled totalledtousled trammeled trammelled trampled traveled travelledtrebled trembled trickled trifled tripled troubledtruckled truffled trundled tumbled tunneled tunnelledtussled twaddled twiddled twinkled victualed victualledwaddled waffled waggled wailed wangled warbledweaseled whaled wheedled whiffled whistled whittledwhorled wiggled wobbled wrangled wrestled wriggledwrinkled yodeled yodelled yowled
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