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Example sentences for "walk with"

  • Above, in the history of Enoch, we explained what it means to walk with God, namely, to advocate the cause of God in public.

  • Here we have another view of what it means to walk with God.

  • To be just and upright bespeaks private virtue, but to walk with God is something public--to advocate the cause of God before the world, to wield his Word, to teach his worship.

  • Taking between his hands the little face, which broke into smiles at the merest touch of the father's fingers, he asked her "when she intended to go a walk with him?

  • He joined as usual in our midday dinner; and after dinner, still as usual, took a walk with me and Maud.

  • I only want you to walk with me to South End.

  • In the meantime we will return to Beechcroft, where Emily's request respecting her letter had occasioned some discussion between the little girls, as they returned from a walk with Marianne.

  • I never promised to walk with a greasy old pitcher.

  • She was useful to her father, always ready to talk to Claude, or walk with him in the intervals when he was sent out of the sickroom to rest and breathe the fresh air.

  • Philip could not tell from her manner whether Miss Price wished him to walk with her or preferred to walk alone.

  • Those who were going to take part in the social evening came in, the younger members of the staff mostly, boys who had not girls of their own, and girls who had not yet found anyone to walk with.

  • Afterwards, when they had sat for a little on the stiff green velvet chairs of the drawing-room, Fraulein Anna asked Philip if he would like to go for a walk with them.

  • Have you forgotten your appointment to walk with her?

  • Yes, dear Crossjay, and if you like you shall have another walk with me after breakfast.

  • Perhaps you think Annie Raymond wouldn't walk with you in that suit?

  • She was willing to walk with me in this ragged suit.

  • She didn't walk with my clothes; she walked with me.

  • I certainly don't mean to insult Miss Raymond, but I wonder at her taste in choosing my father's hired boy to walk with.

  • Paidle, paidlen, to walk with difficulty, as if in water.

  • Skellum, to strike, to slap; to walk with a smart tripping step, a smart stroke.

  • One afternoon Elizabeth Hawthorne came to walk with Mary, and mother went with her instead.

  • My door was open, and who should unexpectedly come out of Mary's room but Miss Elizabeth Hawthorne, going to walk with Mary.

  • He always invited his favorites to walk with him, and I once had the honor of climbing a very high hill by his side, in time to look at a Concord sunset, which I myself realized was the finest in the world.

  • Anna Greene came early, and wanted us to walk with her, on this warm, radiant day.

  • When you go for a walk with a dog, however, the dog protects you: when you go for a walk with a cat, you feel that you are protecting the cat.

  • I know, again, of cats that will go out for a walk with a human fellow-creature, as dogs do.

  • From below the earth corn pollen comes I walk with you.

  • From above water young (comes) I walk with you.

  • From below (the earth) my corn comes I walk with you.

  • From above vegetation (comes to the earth) I walk with you.

  • Maddie made me walk with her in the crocodile, and said, "Croyez bien, ma cherie, que votre Maddie ne vous oubliera jamais.

  • He would appreciate you all the more if you did leave him alone sometimes," I said, talking to myself as much as to her, for it was four days since I had been a walk with my father, and my horrid old conscience was beginning to prick.

  • More than that; I'm going to ask you to take a walk with me.

  • No," returned Wemmick, "but I like to walk with one.

  • Do you think it lawful to walk with one of the Lloegrian Church?

  • I shall be always glad to walk with you, sir, whether you pay me or not.

  • In the evening I took a walk with my wife and daughter past the Plas Newydd.

  • His complexion contrasted oddly with his plentiful snow-white hair, his eyes were dark and piercing, and he had an odd way of contracting them and puckering up his cheeks into innumerable wrinkles when he looked earnestly at objects.

  • Of course, I had but one answer to make; and I never saw more unaffected sorrow depicted on any countenances than I did there on the three before me.

  • He did so to Miss Matty when he first came in.

  • He took out a double eyeglass and peered about for some time before he could discover it.

  • She was a little fluttered and nervous, but no more so than she always was when any man came into her shop.

  • If darkness and unrest enter their souls it is only because somewhere on some point they have been unwilling to walk with her in the paths of meekness and brokenness.

  • Peace with God then comes into my heart, fellowship with God is immediately restored, and I walk with Him in white.

  • Is it not obvious, then, that the reason why we have to be humble in order to walk with God is not merely because God is so big and we so little, that humility befits such little creatures--but because God is so humble?


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "walk with" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    about some; conventional long; headed arches; heap more; lui dit; miserable sinners; sent postpaid; shook hands; slavery time; sweet lard; various types; walk about; walk along; walk away; walk back; walk home; walked about; walked away; walked home; walked over; walked slowly; walked straight; walked together; walking about; walking pace; well represented