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Sidewalk   /sˈaɪdwˌɔk/   Listen
Sidewalk

noun
1.
Walk consisting of a paved area for pedestrians; usually beside a street or roadway.  Synonym: pavement.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Sidewalk" Quotes from Famous Books



... see nothing of Gil but his head, they knew at once that Dionysius Bacon had lost his wager. When Farmer Jonathan and some others had lifted Gil and Dora down to the sidewalk, they told how they came to be on the hay. Afterward, Farmer Jonathan, Dionysius, Dora, Gil, and Will headed a procession to Smith's oyster saloon of those who had heard Dionysius make ...
— Harper's Young People, July 20, 1880 - An Illustrated Weekly • Various

... steps, the wire-blurred window, the street above him. Then he took a deep breath, crossed to the shop door, unlocked it, stepped outside, relocked it after him, and, pocketing the key, climbed the steps to the sidewalk. ...
— Stories from Everybody's Magazine • 1910 issues of Everybody's Magazine

... a group waiting on the sidewalk, and with instinctive shrinking Ashe led the way down the street. Soon they were walking in much the old fashion, and Philip left his friend's question unanswered until they had gone some distance. Then he turned with a smile ...
— The Puritans • Arlo Bates

... husband's roof; and others who relate, with even more avidity, how, after her removal to apartments of her own, he used to spend hours in the adjoining park just to catch a glimpse of her figure as she crossed the sidewalk on her way to and from her carriage. Indeed, his senseless, almost senile passion for this magnificent beauty became a by-word in some mouths, and it only escaped being mentioned at the inquest from ...
— The Woman in the Alcove • Anna Katharine Green

... walking together, talking by the way, when all at once we halted, as by a common impulse, at the sound of a vireo song; a red-eye's song, as it seemed, with the faintest touch of something unfamiliar about it. The singer was in a small butternut-tree close upon the sidewalk, and at once afforded us perfectly satisfactory observations, perching on a low limb within fifteen feet of our eyes, and singing again and again, while we scrutinized every feather through our glasses. As one of my companions said, it was ...
— The Foot-path Way • Bradford Torrey


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