walk
walk 英 [wɔ:k] 美 [wɔk]
n. 步行,走; v. 散步;走过
进行时:walking 过去式:walked 过去分词:walked 第三人称单数:walks 名词复数:walks
- "Put one foot in front of the other, and soon you'll be walking out the door...." That's right, putting your feet into motion is what you need to do to walk.
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- n. 步行,走;
- v. 散步;走过
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1. Let's go for a walk.
咱们去散散步吧。
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2. He walked slowly.
他慢慢地从她身旁走开。
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3. ‘How did you get here?’ ‘I walked.’
“你怎么到这儿来的?”“我走路来的。”
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4. I walked across Scotland.
我徒步穿越了苏格兰。
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5. She missed the bus and had to walk home.
她没赶上公共汽车,只好步行回家。
- walk (n.) c. 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 "broad path in a garden" is from 1530s. Meaning "particular manner of walking" is from 1650s. Meaning "manner of action, way of living" is from 1580s; hence walk of life (1733). Meaning "range or sphere of activity" is from 1759. Sports sense of "base on balls" is recorded from 1905; to win in a walk (1854) is from horse racing (see walk-over). As a type of sponsored group trek as a fund-raising event, by 1971 (walk-a-thon is from 1963).
- walk (v.) "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, curl," from Proto-Germanic *welk- (source also of Old Norse valka "to drag about," Danish valke "to full" (cloth), Middle Dutch walken "to knead, press, full" (cloth), Old High German walchan "to knead," German walken "to full"), perhaps ultimately from PIE root *wel- (3) "to turn, revolve."
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