Grundle vs. Trundle — What's the Difference?
Difference Between Grundle and Trundle
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Grundle
(slang) A big bunch, lots.
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Trundle
A small wheel or roller.
Grundle
(colloquial) A small grumble.
Trundle
The motion or noise of rolling
"The train is in full trundle now, wheels singing on the tracks" (Michael Lowenthal).
Grundle
The perineum; the area between the anus and genitals.
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Trundle
A trundle bed.
Grundle
(colloquial) To emit a grumble, or a lesser version thereof
Trundle
A low-wheeled cart; a dolly.
Trundle
To push or propel on one or more wheels or rollers
"I doubt if Emerson could trundle a wheelbarrow through the streets" (Henry David Thoreau).
Trundle
To carry, convey, or cause to move, especially in a vehicle
"His mother had trundled him off to Sunday school ... right up to the time he was ten" (Tom Wolfe).
Trundle
To move along by rolling or spinning
The bus trundled down the road.
Trundle
To move slowly, noisily, or clumsily
The sheep trundled through the gate into the field.
Trundle
Ellipsis of trundle bed: A low bed on wheels that can be rolled underneath another bed.
Trundle
(obsolete) A low wagon or cart on small wheels, used to transport things.
Trundle
(obsolete) A small wheel or roller.
Trundle
A motion as of something moving upon little wheels or rollers; a rolling motion.
Trundle
The sound made by an object being moved on wheels.
Trundle
(engineering) A lantern wheel, or one of its bars.
Trundle
(heraldry) A spool of golden thread.
Trundle
(transitive) To wheel or roll (an object on wheels), especially by pushing, often slowly or heavily.
Every morning, the vendors trundle their carts out into the market.
To trundle a bed or a gun carriage
Trundle
To transport (something or someone) using an object on wheels, especially one that is pushed.
Trundle
(intransitive) To move heavily (on wheels).
Trundle
(transitive) To move (something or someone), often heavily or clumsily.
Trundle
(intransitive) To move, often heavily or clumsily.
Trundle
(transitive) To cause (something) to roll or revolve; to roll (something) along.
To trundle a hoop or a ball
Trundle
(intransitive) To roll or revolve; to roll along.
Trundle
A round body; a little wheel.
Trundle
A lind of low-wheeled cart; a truck.
Trundle
A motion as of something moving upon little wheels or rollers; a rolling motion.
Trundle
A lantern wheel. See under Lantern.
Trundle
To roll (a thing) on little wheels; as, to trundle a bed or a gun carriage.
Trundle
To cause to roll or revolve; to roll along; as, to trundle a hoop or a ball.
Trundle
To go or move on small wheels; as, a bed trundles under another.
Trundle
To roll, or go by revolving, as a hoop.
Trundle
A low bed to be slid under a higher bed
Trundle
Small wheel or roller
Trundle
Move heavily;
The streetcar trundled down the avenue
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