(n.) Something which rotates about an axis, as a wheel, or the drum of a capstan.
(n.) One of the pins or trundles of a lantern wheel.
Example Sentences:
(1) Fernandez Rundle launched an investigation into the incident, the results of which might not be known for several months, according to Ed Griffith, spokesman for the state attorney’s office.
(2) In this context the reduced serum uridine plus uracil levels in patients with vitamin B12 deficiency (Parry & Blackmore, 1976) and the haematological response of these patients to orotic acid therapy (Rundles & Brewer, 1958) are not readily explicable.
(3) That will allow millions of uninsured Americans to start shopping for health insurance ( CBS has a full explanation here ) Updated at 12.44pm BST 8.32am BST Joe Rundle, head of trading at ETX Capital , explains that the stock markets are calm because traders reckon the shutdown will be brief: Investors are taking the view that a partial shutdown, if resolved quickly, will do little damage to the overall health of the US economy.
(4) Joe Rundle, head of trading at ETX Capital, said: The troika holding fire on unlocking the next tranche of funds for Greece has not only pushed the euro below the 1.27 level this week, but credit default swaps for peripheral euro zone countries are on the rise.
(5) The observation elsewhere (Drew and Rundle, 1977) that increase frequencies of the C5 + variant of the serum cholinesterase in Down's syndrome may be due to a protective influence against adverse environmental factors has been investigated for such factors as age, sex, duration of institutionalisation, presence of the hepatitis -B antigen and maternal age.
(6) In a letter to Ilett, Eversheds partner Nick Rundle said he "cannot agree that Eversheds have acted improperly".
(7) Two genes encode Rbu-P2-carboxylase activase in barley (RcaA and RcaB): RcaA encodes polypeptides of 46 and 42 kDa, which are generated by the alternatively spliced RcaA1 and RcaA2 mRNAs, respectively; RcaB encodes a 42-kDa polypeptide (Rundle, S. J., and Zielinski, R. E. (1991) J. Biol.
(8) Offir Hernandez, Israel’s sister, was among the protestors at Fernandez Rundle’s office on Monday.
(9) Every day that goes by in which state attorney Rundle does not arrest him is a day in which justice is not served for the people of Miami.” Mercado has previously been accused of using excessive force and is mentioned in the wrongful death lawsuit filed against the Miami Beach police department by Hernandez’s family in civil court.
(10) We’re all parents, and our hearts go out to his family and all of his friends,” Fernandez Rundle told the Miami Herald.
(11) Joe Rundle, head of trading, says: We expect it to be priced very attractively by the government in order to garner the demand to deem this IPO as a success given the importance surrounding it.
(12) Among 43 female patients aged 17-46 years with almost severe oligophrenia there were four with primary hypogonadism, one of them a case of Richards Rundle syndrome, now aged 20 years with absence of secondary sex characters, hypoplastic genitals, deafness, ataxia, wasting of muscles and reduced jerks.
(13) We cannot say too much because this is potentially a criminal investigation.” He said Fernandez Rundle was unable to meet with the protestors in person on Monday because the family had appointed lawyers, with whom she had already spoken.
(14) The friends and family of Israel Hernandez staged a rally outside the office of Miami-Dade state attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle, calling for criminal charges against police officer Jorge Mercado .
Trundle
Definition:
(v. i.) A round body; a little wheel.
(v. i.) A lind of low-wheeled cart; a truck.
(v. i.) A motion as of something moving upon little wheels or rollers; a rolling motion.
(v. i.) A lantern wheel. See under Lantern.
(v. i.) One of the bars of a lantern wheel.
(v. t.) To roll (a thing) on little wheels; as, to trundle a bed or a gun carriage.
(v. t.) To cause to roll or revolve; to roll along; as, to trundle a hoop or a ball.
(v. i.) To go or move on small wheels; as, a bed trundles under another.
(v. i.) To roll, or go by revolving, as a hoop.
Example Sentences:
(1) This is why, you see, people with rucksacks pummel all those in their immediate vicinity with their giant sacks as they trundle on their way, whacking them about as they blithely move about trains, pavements or any other public area.
(2) The vehicle has been trundling around the large Gale crater looking for evidence that Mars was habitable in the ancient past.
(3) "Outside of the COI I'd say we had been trundling along nicely.
(4) We left with a wind-up frog that seemed entrancingly lifelike in the shop floor demo, but at home just trundled dully up and down the bathtub until it caught black mould and was banished to the airing cupboard.
(5) 5 min: Hughes brings down Trundle in the middle of the park and Bristol City will take this chance to chip the ball into the box.
(6) Instead of shooting from an increasingly tight angle, he drags the ball back into the path of Lahm, trundling along behind him.
(7) It denies the rebels have surface-to-air missiles, despite video footage showing the truck-mounted system trundling through east Ukraine (and more recently heading back to Russia).
(8) The train now trundles through silent stations, its wagons free of the crowds of men, women and children who once clung to roofs and ladders.
(9) Viktor Nemets plays the decent, dogged driver who trundles through lawless rural badlands before grinding his gears in a gutted community where the menfolk have gone to the bad and the police are too busy tracing nude pictures out of girlie magazines to do anything about it.
(10) The $2.5bn (£1.6bn) trundling science lab began its mission on Mars after a dramatic arrival last month in which the rover was winched to the surface from a spacecraft hovering overhead on rocket thrusters.
(11) The clearance falls to Shaw, who trundles forward until someone deigns to close him down, which is quite a while.
(12) Jamaica meanwhile try a couple of long balls over the top (their predicted tactic pre-game) before Woodbine tries a shot from distance that trundles weakly out for a goal kick.
(13) The breakthrough came after nine minutes when Navas cut the ball back into Touré’s path and the Ivorian’s shot flicked off two players before trundling past Myhill almost in slow motion.
(14) Trundling on a cheesy tourist trail around the Italian capital (the Trevi fountain, the Spanish Steps), it tells four whimsical stories that never intersect, meaning that its most watchable stars – Alec Baldwin, Penélope Cruz, Roberto Benigni and Allen, appearing in one of his movies for the first time since Scoop, in 2006 – never interact.
(15) One plan is for a mass "kiss-in" as the Popemobile trundles past.
(16) There is little sign that the country faces yet another fateful election next Sunday, except for a couple of posters in support of the ruling Justice and Development party, or AKP, and a solitary election van trundling through the streets blaring AKP’s campaign messages through the rows of immaculate yellow and beige housing blocks.
(17) Over four days as the train trundled its way through the heart of Russia and in to Mongolia, two people who were adamant they were not looking for love, opened their hearts, fell madly in love, began planning a future, pledging to spend the rest of their lives together.
(18) If you live in rural Cumbria, chances are you don’t see the inside of many buses: in some parts a bus comes trundling along once a week.
(19) 76 min: Uruguay substitution: Alvaro Pereira, who has played well, trundles off, to be replaced by Abreu, author of that splendid winning spotkick against Ghana.
(20) Google’s cars are trundling slowly around city streets, a strategy that exposes them to more risk and uncertainty, but also means that any accidents are likely to be slow-speed bumps and scrapes.