Definitions
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- adjective abounding in large rocks or stones.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Simple past tense and past participle of
boulder .
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- adjective abounding in rocks or stones
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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I will leave no rock unturned, I will leave no stone untouched, I will leave no pebble un-looked at and I will leave no boulder un-bouldered.
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Back at Palo Duro Canyon, we climbed and bouldered our way up on this cliffside and it was really cool!
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Back at Palo Duro Canyon, we climbed and bouldered our way up on this cliffside and it was really cool!
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Where the Vinkus River seeped along flat-bouldered steps into Restwater, they stopped to get their breath, and they surprised a fox out of a clump of wrestlebush.
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Like Colosseum goers, most of the Welkeners had climbed up on the bouldered walls, yielding the center arena to the two beasts.
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Like Colosseum goers, most of the Welkeners had climbed up on the bouldered walls, yielding the center arena to the two beasts.
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Like Colosseum goers, most of the Welkeners had climbed up on the bouldered walls, yielding the center arena to the two beasts.
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Matt slid to a stop, watching a moment as horse, rider, and dogs trotted down the wooded and bouldered slope.
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Finally I reached a steep drop into the thickly bouldered riverbed and was able to make my way down into it by hanging on to the branch of a fig tree spread out over the bed, where it joined trees from the other side to make a wonderfully cool tunnel below.
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He still shivers by the time he nears the bouldered hillock where the mercenaries and Megaera wait.
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