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toting
[ toh-ting ]
noun
- the practice of taking home food from an employer by a person engaged in domestic service.
- the food so taken.
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
They’ll hit classrooms toting traumas, worries and gaps in their learning.
If you plan to bring your lunch to work, it’s a good idea to make sure the lunch box has a long shoulder strap for easy toting.
This fall, many kids are heading to their new classrooms toting traumas, worries and gaps in their learning.
In the mornings, I often briefly go out to the fenced back garden to perform tasks such as feeding the birds or toting recyclables to the bin.
More than 100 residents, wearing masks and bundled against the bitter cold, held a protest outside city hall, some toting signs reading No QAnon coup.
Before Matthew VanDyke was a gun-toting rebel in Libya, he was just a 29-year-old with OCD, afraid of sugar.
Hell hath no fury like a smartphone-toting, partially informed One Directioner.
WHO: Vuitton-toting socialites, jumpsuit-adorned maintenance workers and shorts-wearing tatted musicians circle the block.
And the number of such breaches is climbing as fast as the number of people toting laptops.
What possible change can any one citizen instigate against that barrage of anti-intellectual, gun-toting paranoia?
The young chap was mighty thankful; said it was tough work toting his baggage such weather.
Boff ob yu is jist got tu git outen de grate house und stop toting wittles tu de po white trash.
And when the other got tired of toting me and wanted to kill me, then it was that this one ran up and took me away from him.
He didn't do nothing to me but look ugly at me, when this one would be toting me on his back across the creeks and up the hills.
"It ain't always convenient toting a young girl round with you," said Mrs. Talcott.
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