Noun(1) steps consisting of two parallel members connected by rungs; for climbing up or down(2) ascending stages by which somebody or something can progress(3) a row of unravelled stitches(4) steps consisting of two parallel members connected by rungs(5) for climbing up or down
Verb(1) come unraveled or undone as if by snagging
Noun(1) steps consisting of two parallel members connected by rungs; for climbing up or down(2) ascending stages by which somebody or something can progress(3) a row of unravelled stitches(4) steps consisting of two parallel members connected by rungs(5) for climbing up or down
Verb(1) come unraveled or undone as if by snagging
(1) When your foot was on the roof, you had to transfer your weight from the ladder to the roof and then step off the ladder fully.(2) As the engines stopped, the firefighters cleared my pilot to shut down and to lower the boarding ladder .(3) They've followed the rules, been generously rewarded, and climbed society's ladder of success.(4) The list is as long as a ladder in a pair of tights.(5) And that forced me to get even higher up on the rickety ladder .(6) Raul turned away angrily, climbing back up the ladder to middle deck.(7) Murdock is taking on an expanded role of football development manager, while Wood takes his first step on the coaching ladder and will be assisted by Paul Penrice and Martin Oglanby.(8) Excluded from society, essentially cut out of her aunt's will, Lily descends the social ladder .(9) I need a tall step ladder to change a light bulb.(10) By the beginning of the twentieth century Catholic Irish Americans were clearly ascending the occupational ladder .(11) Latham has just added a few more rungs to his ladder of political opportunity.(12) The time it takes to climb a rope or scale a ladder leaves soldiers highly vulnerable to attack.(13) The hastily lowered ladder leaned at the back, looking as though it would come crashing down at any moment.(14) Resting there, miraculously, was a ladder , the rusting metal kind, like the fire escapes on apartments.(15) In the mid-1990s, the city began climbing up the evolutionary ladder .(16) This email was from an inspector, who I think is higher up the police ladder than an officer.