ride the circuit
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English
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Verb
[edit]ride the circuit (third-person singular simple present rides the circuit, present participle riding the circuit, simple past rode the circuit, past participle ridden the circuit)
- To travel between small towns on horseback, usually to preach or preside over courts of law.
- 1972, J. S. Cockburn, A History of English Assizes, 1558-1714, page 284:
- "Although commissioned, Hale J did not ride the circuit, his place being taken by Francis Swanton, the clerk of assize."
- 1999, Timothy R. Mahoney, Provincial Lives: Middle-Class Experience in the Antebellum Middle West, page 184:
- "Likewise, other local lawyers would ride the circuit for a session or two, briefly joining the core group as it traveled the circuit, and return home."
- 2001, Catherine L. Albanese, American Spiritualities: A Reader, page 191:
- Usually Methodists dealt with this problem by having their ministers "ride the circuit" by periodically visiting homes and class meetings.
- 2011, Keith Earnest Andersen, The Last of the Pioneers, page 92:
- Dr. Strang was the superintendent of the Home Missionary Work. He took a liking to Stanley and told him that they would give him work in the ministry, if he would ride the circuit.
- (slang) To move someone who has been arrested from police station to police station, thereby hindering release.
- 1949, Raymond Chandler, The Little Sister, page 197:
- “But we don't have to. We can ride the circuit with you. It might take days."