1 |
walk"travel on foot," c. 1200, a merger of two verbs, 1. Old English wealcan "to toss, roll, move round" (past tense weolc, past participle wealcen), and 2. wealcian "to roll up, [..]
|
2 |
walkc. 1200, "a tossing, rolling;" mid-13c., "an act of walking, a going on foot;" late 14c., "a stroll," also "a path, a walkway;" from walk (v.). The meaning &quo [..]
|
3 |
walk/ˈwɑːk/ verb walks; walked; walking 1 walk /ˈwɑːk/ verb walks; walked; walking Learner's definition of WALK 1 a [no object] : to move with your legs at a speed that is slower than running I [..]
|
4 |
walkAlso "walking." A strong four-beatsto-thebar rhythm (especially when played by the bass) important to swing playing, that usually spells out the notes of the chords being played. Walking bas [..]
|
5 |
walkthe act of traveling by foot; "walking is a healthy form of exercise" use one's feet to advance; advance by steps; "Walk, don't run!& [..]
|
6 |
walkto move along on your feet, but more slowly than running
|
7 |
walkn.,vt. Traversal of a data structure, especially an array or linked-list data structure in core. See also codewalker, silly walk, clobber.
|
8 |
walk a person's way or course; a tract of garden or park; to withdraw.
|
9 |
walkgang (geng)
|
10 |
walkshpatsirn
|
11 |
walkIn Old English, "wealcan" meant "to roll"; by Middle English meant "to move about, travel"; and only in Modern English came to mean "walk" as we know it.
|
12 |
walk(n) the act of traveling by foot(n) (baseball) an advance to first base by a batter who receives four balls(n) manner of walking(n) the act of walking somewhere(n) a path set aside for walking(n) a sl [..]
|
13 |
walkGaiting pattern in which three legs are in support of the body at all times, each foot lifting from the ground one at a time in regular sequence.
|
14 |
walkThe improbable act of a batsman giving himself out, without waiting for an umpire's decision. Adam Gilchrist, famously, did this against Sri Lanka in the semi-final of the 2003 World Cup. Mike At [..]
|
15 |
walkGaiting pattern in which three legs are in support of the body at all times, each foot lifting from the ground one at a time in regular sequence.
|
16 |
walk
|
17 |
walkn.(1) "walk, walking about," s.v. walk sb.\1 OED. KEY: walk@n1
|
18 |
walkn1 4 walk 4
|
19 |
walkn. - The action of moving forward or backwards simply by holding left or right on the joystick. - v. - To actually perform Walking. Z
|
20 |
walka "base on balls".
|
21 |
walkalso called base on balls (BB). An automatic advance to 1st
|
22 |
walk(verb) (slang) bid gradually or incrementally rather than all at once or with a jump
|
23 |
walkA pot won by the last blind when no one opens.
|
24 |
walkAn award of first base to a batter who has received four pitches outside the strike zone without swinging at them. All forced runners advance one base. The same as a "base on balls.&quo [..]
|
25 |
walkA player is given a walk when all players fold preflop to them in the big blind, and they win the pot uncontested without having to act.
|
26 |
walkEconomic theory stating stock market prices behave unpredictably due to the efficiency of the market.
|
27 |
walkup - one who purchases an air ticket at the last moment, usually at the airport ticket counter
|
28 |
walkA hand won by the player located in the big blind when all other players have folded.
|
29 |
walkto turn away guests holding confirmed reservations due to lack of available rooms.
|
30 |
walkIN-COOLER - A large commercial refrigerated space often found in supermarkets or places for whole sale distribution.
|
31 |
walk
(intransitive) To move on the feet by alternately setting each foot (or pair or group of feet, in the case of animals with four or more feet) forward, with at least one foot on the ground at all tim [..]
|
32 |
walk===Verb===
====to walk====
=====Synonyms=====
amble
ambulate
bolt
canter
circumambulate
crawl
cruise
creep
dash
dawdle
drag
flee
flounce
gallop
gambol
hike
hobble
hoof it
hurry
hustle
inch
jog
limp
[..]
|
33 |
walklang=en
1600s=1678
|1800s=1818 1843 * '''1678''' — . ''''. *: Wherefore he began to retire himself to his chamber, to pray for and pity them, and also to condole his own misery; he would also wa [..]
|
<< Wales | walk-in >> |