Trundled
Prefix:
N/A
Suffixes:
ed; which means past
Other forms:
Trundle
Root:
N/A
Etymology:
It comes from the word trend which means to run or bend in a certain direction
Another word it comes from is trenden which comes from middle English which means to roll about, turn, and revolve. And from Old English which means Turn around, revolve, or roll.
Now from then:
Today we use this word when we are talking about going somewhere like if we are going to bed or moving something. But then again I wouldn’t say this changed much from back then they probably still used it the same way.
Original Sentence:
"Ollie finished the carpet and trundled the vacuum to his father."
Other Example Sentences:
"whelks, pickled and trundled by wheelbarrow through London streets"
"The conventions are trundled out in Stanley J. Orzel’s cross-cultural romance"
"As the first commercial passenger train trundled over the bridge, the two countries were finally connected by railroad across the Niagara River."
Sentence definition: When one is moving in a sluggish or clumsy way they trundle to said place.