Toboggan in a sentence as a noun

It should be a **** of a toboggan ride.

It was a prefect 3-person toboggan. That was in the 70s.

I want to toboggan/sled in Antarctica. I don't see it happening any time soon, but I should probably go for it while I'm still young and limber.

Is this a translation issue or does someone actually think laying down naked in the snow on a toboggan and riding through winter's bounty is fun? Germans can be odd, but this sounds dumb.

Particularly when my kids were small, I would have liked to take them to the daycare in a toboggan, but the pavements were always ruined with grit.

Toboggan in a sentence as a verb

> Is this a translation issue or does someone actually think laying down naked in the snow on a toboggan and riding through winter's bounty is fun? I know Germans who indeed find this very funny.

[fifth letter of toboggan]mail btw: Madaco dot madaco Edit: have started to read the Leonid Levin paper “randomness conservation inequalities” now. Quite interesting so far.

No amount of money can replace these extra long mornings, lunchtime park/toboggan hill outings, and 4pm Mom-induced visits from my toddler who runs into my office, grabs my hand, and guides me to his building blocks.

You'll want to avoid cheap steel axles if you're doing jumps, and be aware of other limitations just like you can't enter a toboggan run on a plastic sledge. I'm in the UK, I'd have thought in notoriously litigious USA that supermarkets would be extremely wary of being negligent wrt safety of products they're selling?

It has shown zero capacity to self-regulate, and as soon as someone there has a monetization scheme sufficiently powerpointed out, its a toboggan run down a mountain of turd to the result.

Toboggan definitions

noun

a long narrow sled without runners; boards curve upward in front

verb

move along on a luge or toboggan

See also: luge