Limping in a sentence as a noun

A lot of companies that said the same about ActiveX are still limping along with IE6.

I have the image of the injured bird in "Up" limping along burned in my memory.

He missed a point: don't let the service continue limping along and become a vital part of someone's toolkit.

There's no point in limping through the conversation with my childish Swedish, when it's 99% guaranteed that Swedes speak English.

The White House has really done Keynesian economics a disservice by limping into it.

It's routine to walk into a government office and see people limping along with 6-8 year old desktops, dusty CRT monitors with screen burn, etc...

He's the face of the leaks in the same way that Colonel Sanders is the face of KFC, and a single limping dog is the face of an animal charity.

This kind of nonsensical ravings really grate me. Don't write something like 'witness the increasingly dark economic backdrop' or 'America’s economy is still limping along' without some hard numbers.

But they are programmed not to **** themselves under almost any circumstances, so they continue limping along with only partial functionality or none at all.

What if you thought your friend's company would survive but never be more than limping along whereas you had faith that your company would become huge?I ran a company,this issue came up when a friend asked if it was ok to poach from us.

Tesla, in turn, says that he unplugged over their objections.- Broder just can't "account for the discrepancy" about the logs showing him driving close to 55 when he said he was limping along at 45, back from Norwich.- Broder seems defensible on the parking brake - how is he to know not to turn off the car?

Limping definitions

noun

disability of walking due to crippling of the legs or feet

See also: lameness gimp gimpiness gameness claudication