Crossword clues for footpaths
footpaths
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Footpath \Foot"path`\, n.; pl. Footpaths. A narrow path or way for pedestrains only; a footway.
Wiktionary
n. (plural of footpath English)
Usage examples of "footpaths".
Because what I hadn't told Monk was that the carriageways and footpaths of Whitehall Palace were covered with coquina – it had crunched under my feet as I wove my way to the offices of the Exchequer.
As they both jogged in track suits along punishingly steep footpaths, watching the first celandine and coltsfoot pushing their way through the leaf mould and the winter barley slowly turning the brown fields pale green, Lysander wished it was Arthur he was getting fit for the Rutminster Gold Cup rather than Marigold, but they made terrific progress.
Rannaldini was further turned on by Rachel's animosity and the way she kept firing off incensed letters to the local papers complaining about his clay shoots, his closing of footpaths, and his spraying with pesticides.
There are footpaths leading through the crags from the north and the south, but I have men posted there as well.
Men trooping down out of the hills told him that the footpaths were no longer guarded.
He rose early each morning and jogged the quiet footpaths of the Villa Borghese.
On the shaded footpaths of the pine grove, with Rami’s chaperons in close attendance, Gabriel told Anna about Paris.
When they reached the footpaths of the pine grove it began to rain heavily.
Consider the numbers: 445,000 listed buildings, 12,000 medieval churches, 1,500,000 acres of common land, 120,000 miles of footpaths and public rights of way, 600,000 known sites of archaeological interest (98 per cent of them with no legal protection).
I approached it along one of the dozen public footpaths through the overgrowth of pimpernel and cudweed.
Then I took a last look round the shop and slipped outside, where I quickly lost myself among the thick crowds pressing five-deep along the footpaths of the bridge.
This, in turn, curved alongside a four-deck commercial transport highway where even the footpaths were paved.