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Bokep
- Dictionaryverbwalk (verb) · walks (third person present) · walked (past tense) · walked (past participle) · walking (present participle)
- move at a regular pace by lifting and setting down each foot in turn, never having both feet off the ground at once:"I walked across the lawn" · "she turned and walked a few paces"Similar:wend one's waygo for a walkgo by/on foottravel on footfoot itbe a pedestrian
- go on foot for recreation and exercise:"you can walk in 21,000 acres of mountain and moorland"
- travel along or over (a route or area) on foot:"the police department has encouraged officers to walk the beat"
- use movements similar to walking but with a different part of one's body or a support:"he could walk on his hands carrying a plate on one foot"
- (of a quadruped) proceed with the slowest gait, always having at least two feet on the ground at once.
- ride (a horse) at its slowest gait:"he walked his horse toward her"
- NORTH AMERICAN ENGLISHinformalabandon or suddenly withdraw from a job, commitment, or situation:"he was in place as the male lead but walked at the eleventh hour" · "we were expecting the merger with Bell to go through—we didn't expect Bell to walk on the deal"
- be released from suspicion or from a charge:"had any of the others come clean during the trial, he might have walked"
- baseballbe awarded first base after not swinging at four balls pitched outside the strike zone.
- allow or enable (a batter) to walk.
- baseball(of a pitcher) give a walk with the bases loaded so as to force in (a run).
- basketballanother term for travel
- (of a ghost) be present and visible:"the ghosts of Bannockburn walked abroad"
- archaicused to describe the way in which someone lives or behaves:"walk humbly with your God"
nounwalk (noun) · walks (plural noun)- an unhurried rate of movement on foot:"they crossed the field at a leisurely walk"
- BRITISH ENGLISHa part of a forest under one keeper.
- baseballan instance of being awarded (or allowing a batter to reach) first base after not swinging at four balls pitched outside the strike zone.
OriginOld English wealcan ‘roll, toss’, also ‘wander’, of Germanic origin. The sense ‘move about’, and specifically ‘go about on foot’, arose in Middle English. Explore further
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