walk in the Oxford Spanish Dictionary

Translations for walk in the English»Spanish Dictionary

1. walk:

walk
walk
andar esp Spain
walk (in a leisurely way)
walk, don't run!
“walk/don't walk” Am
to walk tall

III.walk [Am wɔk, Brit wɔːk] N

1.1. walk:

walk (leisurely)
walk (long)
to go for or take a walk
to go for or take a walk
ir a caminar esp LatAm
take a walk! Am
take a walk! Am
¡andá a pasear! RioPl inf
take a walk! Am
¡córrete! Chil inf
she took the dog for a walk
inf a walk in the park
walk of shame

See also walk of life

walk away VB [Am wɔk -, Brit wɔːk -] (v + adv) (from a place)

I.walk off VB [Am wɔk -, Brit wɔːk -] (v + adv) (go away)

II.walk off VB [Am wɔk -, Brit wɔːk -] (v + adv, v + prep + o)

III.walk off VB [Am wɔk -, Brit wɔːk -] (v + o + adv, v + adv + o)

walk out VB [Am wɔk -, Brit wɔːk -] (v + adv)

walk over VB [Am wɔk -, Brit wɔːk -] (v + prep + o) inf

walk on VB [Am wɔk -, Brit wɔːk -] (v + adv)

walk through VB [Am wɔk -, Brit wɔːk -] (v + prep + o) inf

walk-in [Am ˈwɔk ˌɪn, Brit ˈwɔːkɪn] ADJ

walk-through [Am ˈwɔk ˌθru, Brit] N

walk-up [Am ˈwɔk ˌəp, Brit] N Am

walk in the PONS Dictionary

Translations for walk in the English»Spanish Dictionary

walk-out [ˈwɔ:kaʊt, Am ˈwɑ:k-] N

walk-on [ˈwɔ:kɒn, Am ˈwɑ:kɑ:n] ADJ

walk-over [ˈwɔ:kˌəʊvəʳ, Am ˈwɑ:kˌoʊvɚ] N inf

walk Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

to take sb out for a walk
to go for a solitary walk
we can talk as we walk
to take out for a walk
to walk at a snail's pace
American English

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Patients are recommended to sit up on the edge of the bed and walk short distances for several times a day.
en.wikipedia.org
This has created a narrow chasm up to high and about in length through which visitors can walk.
en.wikipedia.org
Development, for example the ability to walk at five years of age, was impaired in many children taking nitrazepam, but was not impaired with several other nonbenzodiazepine antiepileptic agents.
en.wikipedia.org
The actors of intransitive verbs such as walk, or sit are also planners.
en.wikipedia.org
She would walk around in the middle of the day, you know, in a terry cloth bathrobe.
www.dailymail.co.uk
In the winter, people could walk or take the horse drawn sled to the mainland over the ice.
en.wikipedia.org
The sidewalk in front of the theatre features a walk of fame which highlights local cinematic accomplishments.
en.wikipedia.org
He didn't just walk up and down the wire: he performed stunts such as backwards walking, hanging upside down and doing a headstand on the wire.
www.independent.co.uk
One can walk into the quarter, where people are always engrossed with dyes and blocks.
en.wikipedia.org
The master bedroom suite has a walk-in wardrobe, an en-suite bathroom and even a balcony.
www.plymouthherald.co.uk

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