0 past simple and past participle of trundle
1 (to cause something) to move slowly on wheels:
She trundled the wheelbarrow down the path.
Hundreds of trucks full of fruit and vegetables trundle across the border each day.
The negotiations have been trundling on for months and there's still no end in sight.
This particular piece of hokum is still invoked today and is frequently trundled out as one of the reasons why academic organicists fail to embrace scientific and statistical methodology.
That situation has trundled on for 20-odd years despite massive changes in the game and the involvement of huge sums of money.
Which authorities, if any, have agreed to chariots of death being trundled around their counties, or is this an academic matter?
Others were actually trundled in while the meeting was going on.
We find exactly the same solutions, all of which have a proven record of failure, being trundled out again as though they represented something new.
Complaints, once justified, continue to be trundled out long after they have ceased to have justification.
I have trundled to supplementary benefit offices with parents.
That argument has been trundled out again and again.