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Definition of lame
Definition of lame





definition of lame

‘The four-year-old son of Scenic appeared perceptibly lame in his right hind leg during the broadcast.’.‘Slightly lame in his right leg after suffering from polio, Bruce said the idea really appealed to him.’.‘The passage assumes that the blind will, in fact, want their sight back and the deaf to hear again, the lame to walk properly and dumb to speak.’.‘Pat Behan, a Castledermot mechanic, who could make the lame walk, the dumb speak and the deaf hear when it came to cars, was asked to perform a major miracle.’.‘A President Kerry will make the lame walk and the blind see!’.‘She told the court that she was appalled and sickened by the poor condition of some of the sheep and cattle and said that between 15 and 20 per cent of the animals were lame.’.‘One time, not too long ago, I saw a line of lame dancers unable to participate in class, sitting on the sidelines, questioning when they would return to dance.’.‘While this was happening on Sunday, with the Rector leading the perambulation, those members of the congregation who are now too frail or lame to do the walk held an informal service in church.’.‘There's a gratuitous poignancy provided by the fact that she's lame, which is no doubt to suggest that she won't be able to get another man - it fell a bit flat for me.’.‘My daughter was meant to be out today but her horse went lame.’.‘Later it was revealed that the horse was lame and he will now miss the remainder of the 2002-03 season, including his chance at Cheltenham glory.’.‘There were also some lame sheep and others suffering from diarrhoea.’.‘I was just reading a report the other day that 24% of all dairy cows are lame.’.







Definition of lame