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Answer for the clue "Trudge on ", 4 letters:
plod

Alternative clues for the word plod

Word definitions for plod in dictionaries

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1560s, of uncertain origin, perhaps imitative of the sound of walking heavily or slowly. Related: Plodded ; plodding .

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Plod \Plod\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Plodded ; p. pr. & vb. n. Plodding .] [Gf. Gael. plod a clod, a pool; also, to strike or pelt with a clod or clods.] To travel slowly but steadily; to trudge. --Shak. To toil; to drudge; especially, to study laboriously ...

Usage examples of plod.

Behind him he could hear Plod and the Basilican soldier also standing and bowing.

In the last half-hour, as the two ships closed, the Biter signalled her intentions exceeding clearly, and the Noble Goring, as the trader was bizarrely named, ignored them with plodding insouciance.

The guerrillas, plodding slowly and burdened with their sick, followed the smell of the warm deer and the trail of its freshly spilled blood.

Stuffed like sausages into wagons or carts, riding any available beast, even on foot, the horde plodded down the road to the valley before the gates of Deese House.

Thomas, dinnerless and supperless, reached Hamstead, and plodding doggedly up the road in a heavy rain, met Mr.

As Pauli and Alex plodded their way along the duckboards which made a slatted floor for the deep trench, both were thinking of Brand.

Thoroughly reminded of why he avoided heavy drinking, Dreibrand grabbed his armor and plodded into Fata Nor, searching for a well.

However, I plodded on, drawing some small comfort from the fact that as darkness came the mist rose from the ground and appeared to condense in a ghostly curtain twenty feet overhead, where it hung between me and a clear night sky, presently illumined by starlight with the strangest effect.

Handing the brass image to Foy, the leader of the Wu-Fan, plodded toward his throne, with his servant advancing, crouched, beside him.

Fleetwood depicted his plodding Gower at the tussle with account-books.

We plodded upward all that cold wet morning, and in the afternoon we came to the longest of those long hills, its top lost in a driving gurry of snow and rain.

The middle-aged handicap hurdler plodding sleepily round the ring was the third Axminster horse I had ridden during the week, and I had already grown to appreciate the sleekness and slickness of his organization.

He carried the blankets and jerrican, water bottles 258 and food tin hitched to his body, and held her good arm to support her as she plodded on blindly now, stumbling a little.

His horse ignored him, continuing to plod grudgingly along through the dense San Linder woods.

Below, morning sun gleamed on a stream diverted and partly canalized to make a route for freight-pitchens, mindlessly plodding from loq to loq with their massive burdens.