Trudge in a sentence as a noun

When it's time to go to bed, one of us has to trudge down to the basement and start flipping switches.

It's not a job offer; it's an offer to trudge through their interview process.

So many folks just trudge through their years in a major that is completely boring.

So they trudge right over, notebook in hand asking me to recover their data.

I could pull up the Hadoop codebase and trudge my way through some distributed systems code.

Tags may be more efficient in the long run, but there's a painful trough of uselessness to trudge through before we can get there.

Haskell was painful for me to learn because to become proficient I had to trudge through not only books but wikis, blogs, and code.

Trudge in a sentence as a verb

We used to have to trudge to the library, in the snow, uphill both ways, to pour over out of date books to try to find information.

I remember one commenter who sympathized with the dev team -- whenever I was down in the dumps, I would read his comment to trudge on.

I am not a business guy and don't need to understand what their model is. I understand my model - that I test network software and I don't want to trudge through amazon lookups in wireshark.

Is it OK to care for the obese, but not to feed them better desserts?Human development is a long, hard trudge of incremental improvements, with a few leaps here and there.

That seems atrocious to me. Basically you are advocating for a situation in which children trudge through the mechanical needs of the day simply to produce homework output, to be repeated ad nauseum day after day for most of their childhood.

Judging from my visit last weekend, today that line would say "a place for people to spend money and trudge through queues to experience self-contained stories with no room for imagination or learning.

But for every incumbent disrupted by a feisty startup, there are plenty who are absorbed by incumbents, or have a short spectacular success followed by a flameout, while the incumbents trudge on at their own pace.

Trudge definitions

noun

a long difficult walk

verb

walk heavily and firmly, as when weary, or through mud; "Mules plodded in a circle around a grindstone"

See also: slog footslog plod tramp