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Discover LudwigThe phrase "go on trail" does not make sense in written English.
You might mean to say "go on a trail" (note the use of the article "a"), which means to walk through a route or path. For example: "Let's go on a trail to explore the woods!".
Exact(1)
Pick up the piece of paper and go on trail you found it on.
Similar(57)
Especially when we go on trails.
The advantage to canoes is that you can go on trails where motorboats are not allowed.
And they worry that the government will require them to make side-by-sides so wide and so low to the ground to decrease the chance of rollovers that they will no longer be able to go on trails.
What hasn't been going on is a money trail.
Go on a trail ride one day, or even moving cows can relax him.
The show goes on, injured players in a trail waving those that remain onwards into the deep freezers of recovery.
Maybe I'll go on the trail with Ed".
There are two possible directions to go on any trail and, for this trip, we'll be heading north and east, towards Connecticut.
Visitors will be encouraged to go on a trail through the museum to find other objects that may have LBGTQ (lesbian, bisexual, gay, transgender, queer) stories.
When we go on a trail walk, the dramatic belly of the bush comes to life and for a couple of hours we become part of the landscape.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com