One scrap ofgridironed roof sticking out from the powdered ground cross-hatches the horizon.
In front of us was a long gentle hill-slope, gridironed with trenches which broke out above the green grass like the wandering burrow of a mole.
They ran wild in the street; they played about the knees of their mothers, who sat gossiping in the doorways; they hung over the railing of the fire-escapes, which gridironed the front of every tall house.
The largest of these Parks, by far, is the San Luis, and we found it fairly gridironedwith trout streams, and rimmed around with mountains.
Her streets were already wellgridironed with horse-railroads.
The new movement began in Western New York, which is fairly gridironed with a network of these unprofitable branch railroads.
The land had become gridironed with tracks; business did not offer itself so freely as it had at the outset.
The net result is that the South outside the mountains is gridironed with railways.
States like Louisiana and Georgia are fairly gridironedwith railroads, and new ones building all the time: indeed, in the "Delta" of Mississippi a railroad can live on local business if it has a belt of its own twelve miles wide.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "gridironed" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.