Idioms for walk
Origin of walk
before 1000; (v.) Middle English
walken, Old English
wealcan to roll, toss,
gewealcan to go; cognate with Dutch, German
walken to full (cloth), Old Norse
vālka to toss; (noun) Middle English, derivative of the v.
OTHER WORDS FROM walk
un·walked, adjectiveWords nearby walk
Definition for walk (2 of 2)
race walking
noun
the sport of rapid, continuous-foot-contact walking, requiring that the trailing foot not be lifted until the other meets the ground and the knee locks momentarily, and executed in an upright, rhythmic stride with the arms usually held bent and high and pumped close to the body.
Compare
power walking.
OTHER WORDS FROM race walking
race walker, nounExample sentences from the Web for walk
British Dictionary definitions for walk
walk
/ (wɔːk) /
verb
noun
Derived forms of walk
walkable, adjectiveWord Origin for walk
Old English
wealcan; related to Old High German
walchan, Sanskrit
valgati he moves
Medical definitions for walk (1 of 2)
walk
[ wôk ]
v.
To move over a surface by taking steps with the feet at a pace slower than a run.
n.
The gait of a human in which the feet are lifted alternately with one part of a foot always on the ground.
The characteristic way in which one walks.
Medical definitions for walk (2 of 2)
race walking
n.
The sport of walking for speed, the rules of which require the racer to maintain continual foot contact with the ground and to keep the supporting leg straight at the knee when that leg is directly below the body.
Idioms and Phrases with walk
walk