1. traps - Noun
2. traps - Verb
Small or portable articles for dress, furniture, or use; goods; luggage; things.
Source: Webster's dictionaryThere are three traps of Satan that steal joy and peace: - Regretting about the past - Fear for the future - Ingratitude for the present. Anthony the Great
Some Cupid kills with arrows, some with traps. William Shakespeare
Hate traps us by binding us too tightly to our adversary. Milan Kundera
The notion of making money by popular work, and then retiring to do good work on the proceeds, is the most familiar of all the devil's traps for artists. Logan Pearsall Smith
Failure is a state of mind. It's like one of those sand traps an ant lion digs. You keep sliding back. Takes one hell of a jump to get out of it. John Steinbeck
With traps and obstacles and hazards confronting us on every hand, only blindness or indifference will fail to turn in all humility, for guidance or for warning, to the study of examples. Benjamin N. Cardozo