Once on a time a lift in the waggon just across the wet turf to the macadamised road--if it chanced to be going that way--would have been looked upon as a fortunate thing.
For, besides the through traffic out from the market-place to the broad macadamised road that had taken the place and the route of an ancient Roman road, there were the customers to the shops that lined each side of the street.
Simple though it sounds, it is astonishingly effective, and, indeed, the sensation is almost that of walking on a hard, macadamised road.
You promise me, on your honour,' she said, as the lights of the town and the well-macadamised street warned of the approaching halt.
But next day the sun shone again, and we were taken for a drive over macadamised roads and shown things that corrected our opinion of Bush scenery.
Clara went out for a long walk over the old macadamised road that ran through the White-Russian town on its way to St. Petersburg.
When she reached the macadamised bank and caught the smell of the water it was borne in upon her afresh that it was spring.
On the top of the bundar we struck a macadamised road and rattled gaily along to see the town.
Macadamised streets and level footpaths take the place of miry dray tracks and sloughs of despond.
The road was fairly good, and had been formed and macadamised in needful places.
The contract was performed, they safely negotiated the perilous pass, the mountain horse treading as securely and safely as on a macadamised high road, and the cob going very differently with a different rider.
Later, the introduction, also, of the steam-roller was to revolutionise the art of making macadamised roads.
It is at this placid rural centre that themacadamised road ends.
San Jose, the next town of importance to be reached, is remarkable as being the terminus of a splendid macadamised road that runs a distance of ninety-six kilometres from Montevideo to this point.
Another mighty influence for good was the introduction (about 1818) of macadamised roads, which brought travelling up to the point of ten miles an hour.
Macadamised or gravel roads will no doubt entirely supersede the others.
Roads were not then macadamised and strictly confined to one line.
In wet weather he walks upon the macadamised strip dryshod, and in summer upon either of the grass strips, easily and comfortably, without going out into the mowing-grass to have the pleasure of turf under his feet.
St. John said that it is macadamised where it passes Hindhead, and Terence knew as well as he knew his own name that it is notmacadamised at that point.
A false belief andmacadamised roads dotted is both the tempter and the (sic) the place,' et cetera.
But the road was good, though being macadamised it was hard for the feet, and we made but few rests.
But after an hour or so our heavy burdens, the still hot sun, and the roughly macadamised road began to tell on us.
As I reached the castle, I got upon the Macadamised road, which had the advantage of a bottom somewhere, though it was covered with a liquid mud, of which every passing foot gave you a spatter to the hips.
The roadway of the street is an even macadamised surface, but no attempt has yet been made to form footpaths on a general level.
In 1902 Auckland possessed only one paved street; there are now thirty-three streets laid in either asphalt, wood blocks, or concrete, as well as a large number of macadamised roads.
The country has not been covered with a network of macadamised roads, and the bridges are by no means as safe as could be desired.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "macadamised" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.