Walk
- n. The route or district regularly served by a vender; as, a milkman’s walk.
- v. i. To move along on foot; to advance by steps; to go on at a moderate pace; specifically, of two-legged creatures, to proceed at a slower or faster rate, but without running, or lifting one foot entirely before the other touches the ground.
- v. i. To move or go on the feet for exercise or amusement; to take one’s exercise; to ramble.
- v. i. To be stirring; to be abroad; to go restlessly about; — said of things or persons expected to remain quiet, as a sleeping person, or the spirit of a dead person; to go about as a somnambulist or a specter.
- v. i. To be in motion; to act; to move; to wag.
- v. i. To behave; to pursue a course of life; to conduct one’s self.
- v. i. To move off; to depart.
- v. t. To pass through, over, or upon; to traverse; to perambulate; as, to walk the streets.
- v. t. To cause to walk; to lead, drive, or ride with a slow pace; as to walk one’s horses.
- v. t. To subject, as cloth or yarn, to the fulling process; to full.
- 1n. 1 The route or district regularly served by a vender; as, a milkman’s walk.
- 1v. i. 1 To move along on foot; to advance by steps; to go on at a moderate pace; specifically, of two-legged creatures, to proceed at a slower or faster rate, but without running, or lifting one foot entirely before the other touches the ground.
The word meanings were obtained from OPTED(The Online Plain Text English Dictionary), which is based on “The Project Gutenberg Etext of Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary” which is in turn based on the 1913 US Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary (See Project Gutenburg), as a text file.