英:['fʊtslɒg]
美:['fʊtˌslɒg]
英:['fʊtslɒg]
美:['fʊtˌslɒg]
复数:footslogs
第三人称单数:footslogs
现在分词:footslogging
过去式:footslogged
过去分词:footslogged
Verb
1. walk heavily and firmly, as when weary, or through mud;
"Mules plodded in a circle around a grindstone"
The first known use of footslog was in 1897
1 Mr. Thompson told The Lakeland Ledger in Florida in 1959 that the filmmakers “wanted it to be an authentic story of footslogging infantrymen during the last battle of the war.”
2 Instead, he chose to insist that his work was "immaculately factual", the dedicated work of remorseless, footslogging research.
3 The side missions extend the footslog as you toil to pry up more bits of precious story.
4 You already grasp exactly the sort of rock-rolling footslog you’re signing up for, though maybe a year or three or five away from the game was enough to bleed off any lingering longing to return.
5 Participants use social media and old-fashioned footslogging to get the message out.
6 Photograph: Christopher Thomond for the Observer Their day starts not long after first light with a footslog up one of Sheffield's seven hills, or a track workout that leaves lungs busted and begging for mercy.
7 This footslog, which has brought him two wickets so far in carefully rationed spells, sounds as if it has better career prospects.
8 Of course, I was "footslogging," but this day, having no horse to drag after me, was able to wander more at leisure.