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It would have been grand to traipse down to the Edwardian Room for dinner.
WSJ: Gatsby Slept Here
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For the whole traipse through the courts actually takes longer than a technological generation of smartphones.
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They traipse along muddy roads on the Czech-Polish border, climbing into cabs to service lorry drivers backed up at customs.
ECONOMIST: Plenty of muck, not much money
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Women traipse in from the countryside with hand-knotted nets strapped to their foreheads, stuffed with cabbages, piglets and sometimes their babies.
ECONOMIST: Banyan
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But when poachers carrying rifles or machetes traipse by a detector, it will send a radio signal to a treetop antenna.
ECONOMIST: Monitor
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Some consumers, having paid for door-to-door delivery, will not want to traipse to a nearby shop or petrol station to collect their parcels.
ECONOMIST: Delivery lockers: Delivering the goods | The
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This read will cure you of any inclination to send your kids (if you love 'em) to summer camp or traipse through the woods yourself.
FORBES: Fact and Comment
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To own a piece of this technological history, Brits must traipse to their local post office or newsagents and ask for the Great British Railway set of stamps.
FORBES: Snail Mail Goes High Tech (Sort Of)
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We were about to traipse around the soul of America.
CNN: Talking Race With The President
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As reliably as autumn brings Orion to the night sky, spring each year sends a curious constellation to the multiplex: a minor cluster of romantic comedies and the couples who traipse through them, searching for love.
NEWYORKER: The Disconnect
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"This is why I became a dressmaker because I could make my own clothes and actually avoid this entire scenario of having to traipse around and find something that may fit without having to compromise, " she says.
BBC: Fat profits: Business embraces big people