0 (to cause something) to move slowly on wheels: --
The negotiations have been trundling on for months and there's still no end in sight.
Hundreds of trucks full of fruit and vegetables trundle across the border each day.
She trundled the wheelbarrow down the path.
1 to push something on wheels, or to cause something to roll along: --
[ T ] She trundled the wheelbarrow down the road.
We know about nuclear waste trundling through our constituencies.
He will no doubt be trundled on like some piece of antiquated medieval artillery to try to quieten us with a legal salvo.
We have 65-year-old locomotives still trundling along; and 75-year-old cotton mills equipped with 75-year-old machinery.
The coal was fed into different wagons from a hopper and it was then trundled along through the surrounding fields.
Equipment is trundled from one ward to another and the beds are placed in any ward where the patient happens to be.
My constituents are fed up to the back teeth with juggernauts trundling down country lanes on their way to landfill sites.
Meanwhile, it is a pleasure of a certain antiquarian kind to listen to these dinosaurs trundling about.
I do not know about empty buses trundling up and down, but many cars can be seen, each carrying only one person.