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Example sentences for "walk"

Lexicographically close words:
wala; wald; walde; wale; walis; walke; walked; walken; walkers; walkes
  1. The text answereth you, "They that walk in the footsteps" not of Abraham, but "in the footsteps of the faith of Abraham.

  2. This is the way you must walk in, if you ever come to heaven.

  3. You must walk the same way of grace, if you would come to the same kingdom of glory.

  4. The second use is a word of instruction, and it shall be but a word or two; that if all the saints of God must walk in the same way of life and salvation that Abraham did, then there is no byway to bring a man to happiness.

  5. I will walk before thee in battle, at thy approach I will put kings to flight; I will break down doors of brass.

  6. The truth is, here is the way, and the only way, and you must walk here if ever you come to life and happiness.

  7. A man would have thought the text should have run thus: They that walk in the footsteps of Abraham.

  8. Walk not as those, run not with them: alas!

  9. The last use shall be a use of comfort to all the saints and people of God, whose consciences can witness that they have labored to walk in the uprightness of their heart as Abraham did.

  10. But he kicked the door instead, so he absently put his key in the door and opened it and started to walk in-- Yes, that is what happened.

  11. As he explained it to Haynes later, he simply put his key in the door and opened it and started to walk in.

  12. But you spend most of your time begging a living from these Men, Jack--tell me if they generally walk as I do, on all fours?

  13. He strutted about to catch his breath, and his walk was the walk of one who feels his superiority.

  14. One could bring home from a walk a collection of leaves and then, with the aid of the illustrations in this book, identify them all.

  15. The Red Widow thanked Lynx and Whisky-Jack for bringing her wounded son home, and begged Pisew to walk back in his tracks a distance, and use every endeavour to cover up the trail leading to their burrow.

  16. Whoever shall start out for a country walk with this little book will add greatly to present enjoyments, and will be continually acquiring a fund of useful and agreeable knowledge.

  17. A fine walk along a beach of shells, and we came to a spot where, trees here and there, the land was all meadow, sloping away to the water, which stirred a sedgy growth of reeds bordering its margin.

  18. The doctor suggested a walk to the beach, where there was a long, low shed tumbling to pieces, but open lengthwise to a current of air which he thought might keep off the mosquitoes.

  19. The chests themselves were deemed exceedingly precious, especially those with unfractured looks, which would absolutely click, and enable the owner to walk off with the key.

  20. I was so afraid the fishman wouldn't tell you to start exactly at two, or that one of us would walk faster than the other; but we met at the very spot!

  21. Thirza was barefooted, and tough as her little feet were, the long walk over the stubble fields tired her.

  22. He says he would walk right up close and cuff em if they dared to yip; but I ain't like that!

  23. Where you used to live did all the cows go down into the boggy places when you drove em to pasture, or did some walk in the road?

  24. Her hair lay jest as smooth and slick as glass all the time, but five times did she walk her off, and go through with that performance.

  25. Then there wuz another woman who would walk her little girl into the bedroom every few minutes, and wet her hair, and comb it over, and curl it on her fingers.

  26. She couldn't walk in 'em a good honerable walk to save her life.

  27. Do they walk from way out there, and cleer up that mountain agin?

  28. You are goin' to walk into meetin' with your hat on, are you?

  29. And so after a short walk we came to the village that haint stirred by any commotion or alarm.

  30. And if he don't walk off, then the great question comes in, How will he get there?

  31. No sooner landed but it fell a mighty storm of rain and hail, so I put into a cane shop and bought one to walk with, cost me 4s.

  32. So with Creed to the 'Change, and there took up my wife and left him, and we two home, and I to walk in the garden with W.

  33. Then to walk in the garden with my wife, and so to my office a while, and then home to the only Lenten supper I have had of wiggs--[Buns or teacakes.

  34. She passed down the walk between Margaret's beautifully kept Japanese trees, and gained the sidewalk.

  35. Perhaps we all walk too much the same way.

  36. She did not walk rapidly but lingered along the road.

  37. He had what he cared for: a walk home with this very sweet and very natural girl, who did not seem to care whether he walked home with her or not.

  38. Annie was even a little surprised when Von Rosen presented himself and said, "I will walk home with you, Miss Eustace, with your permission.

  39. Peter has gone home for the night, Marie said," Alice told Annie, "but Marie and I will walk home with you.

  40. It occurred to her that Mr. von Rosen might walk home with her as he had done from Margaret's, and a longing and terror at once possessed her.

  41. She wanted very much that the young man should walk home with her, but she was very much afraid of making trouble.

  42. Henceforth husband and wife would walk apart in a spiritual sense, unless there should come a revolution in the character of the wife, who was the stepper aside.

  43. She glanced rather apprehensively as she spoke at the large white house, not two minutes' walk distant across the street.

  44. Now Annie and I will walk with you and you must steal in and not wake anybody and go to bed and to sleep.

  45. I shall have much pleasure in assisting him to examine for himself all the local knowledge which a short walk to the spots may enable him to acquire.

  46. The bowed man in the car-seat remembered with a flush of reminiscent misery how the lad turned suddenly in his walk and entered the door of a drinking-room that stood open.

  47. The little pony had been sold long ago, and going to town meant a walk of twelve miles.

  48. David had to assure himself over and over that it was really he who was put in that disgraceful dress, and locked in that shameful walk from corridor to workroom, from work-room to chapel.

  49. A walk down Collins Street or Flinders Lane would astonish some of the City Croesuses.

  50. Sydney has of late been acquiring an unenviable notoriety for capital offences, and it is not advisable for ladies to walk alone in the streets there at any time of the day.

  51. As you walk round you cannot fail to notice the sunburnt faces of the people you meet.

  52. It is little better when he gets old enough to walk and talk.

  53. But these are very large,' persisted the Professor; 'not scientific gardens like Kew, but capital places to walk and sit about in.

  54. Walk down Collins Street at the time of the block on Saturday, and I doubt whether you can count half a dozen bonnets which are both pretty and suitable to the face and head of the wearer.

  55. I turned down the walk that led across the campus to the point whither Miss Poole was directing her steps, and I took a gait that I judged should meet her at the intersection of the walks.

  56. Go down to my box-factory and walk through it and see them, self-supporting and self-respecting.

  57. No, next Sunday afternoon, if you will let me walk home with you after you have explained the she-bears.

  58. My only cause of regret was that I should miss my walk through the street where the young school-mistress was shining.

  59. Miss Pansy" was in, and would the lady please walk up.

  60. At this moment who should walk in but Mr. James Canter himself.

  61. It soon became known that we should have to wait until a brakeman could walk to the nearest telegraph station, miles off, and have another engine despatched to our aid from a town thirty or more miles away.

  62. My little girls and I got to that point of intimacy where they would talk to me, and Dix had made friends with them and used to walk beside them as we went along.

  63. It may be that my empty heart, bruised and lonely in that great city, was waiting with open door for any guest bold enough to walk in and claim possession.

  64. In my walk through the poorer quarter on my way to my office I used to see a great deal of the children, and it struck me that one of the saddest effects of poverty--the dire poverty of the slum--was the debasement of the children.

  65. Didn't he have to pay back fifty dollars in good money, and didn't the man walk off with the boots?

  66. A long walk was before him, for Cleveland was seventeen miles away.

  67. It was a long walk for a little boy of four, but sometimes his sister Mehetabel, now thirteen years old, carried him on her back.

  68. After the House adjourned, other members would go off in cars or carriages, or walk down the avenue in groups.

  69. Suppose you came for a long walk on the moor to-morrow with Frances and me--and Barbara?

  70. After supper, Mademoiselle Thérèse explained that they usually went for a walk with the widower and his children who lived next door.

  71. There is something in his walk that assures me it is he, and I must see him without his spectacles.

  72. Then Aunt Thérèse won't go for the walk after supper.

  73. When she had returned to work with Mademoiselle Loiré, the business of entertainment fell to Barbara, who proposed a walk round the garden.

  74. She knew she was very poor, and could not afford to do such things for herself, and she was too frail to walk beyond the garden, but she also greatly feared that she might have made the offer in a way to hurt her friend's feelings.

  75. Barbara felt that, do as she would, her breath could hold out no longer, and she slackened her pace to a walk once more.

  76. It was hard, certainly, to walk slowly across, for she thought she should not run, feeling all the time as if two hands would catch hold of her in the darkness.

  77. At first the visitor did not seem to care for the idea, but when the mistress with her suggested it was too hot to walk about, she immediately jumped up and said there was nothing she would like better.

  78. If God did not walk in the Garden of Eden, how can we be assured that he spoke from Sinai?

  79. Yet the party of Galileans who, according to the narrative, landed and took a walk on the Gadarene territory, were as much foreigners in the Decapolis as Frenchmen would be at Dover.

  80. In fact, the fence turned out to be a mere heap of dry sticks and brushwood, and one might walk through it with impunity: the which I did.

  81. People would only have said we were grown too proud to walk to church.

  82. He used to walk and run about to harden himself, till at length his muscles were strengthened, his frame altogether more robust, his bones more firm and solid, and his speech correct.

  83. This afternoon I have had a walk in the sunshine, and have just come back rejoicing in a renewed communion with nature.

  84. To-morrow you may go to walk in the dress,' said the mother; and the little one looked up at her hat and down again at her dress, and smiled blissfully.

  85. My friends have been for a walk across the Fens, and have found something.

  86. We've a good four miles' walk ahead of us, and--what was that?

  87. He wouldn't have been such a duffer as to walk too far out of his way--if he was bent upon going there at all.

  88. The lodgings were taken, the charge being moderate for the kind of living that men in their walk of life were used to, and the next morning found them both ensconced at their new work.

  89. If you feels inclined some time, I'll walk you down to the Pig and Whistle and you shall 'ave a word or two with a chap I know.

  90. Mr. Lake and I are going out for a walk across the Fens.

  91. So strong and vehement was her dread that she preferred to go out in the boat which she feared, rather than to walk among the paths and alleys of the trees hung with vines, or in the mysterious silence of the olives.

  92. I shall walk with him through the city, I shall hear Giotto speak to him of St. Francis, and Arnolfo will tell us of his dreams.

  93. Croce; it is the beautiful house where God and man may meet and walk in the shadow.

  94. And at dawn I shall walk with Dante, and I shall know by the softness of his voice when Beatrice passeth, but I shall not dare to lift my eyes.

  95. Then very early in the morning I will rise from my bed under the holy branch of olive, I will walk in my garden before the sun is high, I will look on my beloved city.

  96. If you leave the steamer at San Terenzo, you may walk along a sort of seawall, built out of the cliff and boulders of the shore, round more than one little promontory, to Lerici, whose castle seems to guard the Tuscan sea.

  97. How often in those days Cosimo would walk with him and Fra Angelico in the cloisters on a summer night, after listening may be to Marsilio Ficino or to the vague and wonderful promises of Argyropolis.

  98. Here, as we may think, he may well have talked with Fra Angelico, for he would often walk in the cloisters in the evening with the friars, and must have seen and praised the frescoes there.

  99. I should as soon have expected the bones of Tom Sheppard to reunite themselves and walk out of that case, as Thames Darrell to return.

  100. He had need of all the inexhaustible energy of his character to support him through his toilsome walk over the wet grass, or along the slippery ploughed land.

  101. It was a long walk she had to undertake, even if she had endured no previous fatigue, but feeble as she was, it was almost more than she could accomplish.

  102. But questions come to us again, as we walk in silence.

  103. We alone, of the thousands who walk this earth, we alone in this hour are doing a work which has no purpose save that we wish to do it.

  104. It is dark in the streets and there are no men about, for no men may walk through the City when they have no mission to walk there.

  105. Then the bell rings and we walk in a straight column to the City Theatre for three hours of Social Recreation.

  106. And we shall join our hands when we wish, or walk alone when we so desire.

  107. When questions come to puzzle us, we walk faster, then turn and forget all things as we watch the Golden One following.

  108. Then the bell rings and we walk in a straight column to one of the City Halls, for the Social Meeting.

  109. He will be taught to walk straight [-and-] on his own feet.

  110. Tomorrow, in the full light of day, we shall take our box, and leave our tunnel open, and walk through the streets to the Home of the Scholars.

  111. Or if thou hast uphoarded in thy life Extorted treasure in the womb of earth (For which, they say, you spirits oft walk in death), The cock crows.

  112. For Lord Hamlet, Believe so much in him, that he is young, And with a larger tether may he walk Than may be given you.

  113. But I'm not grown up," stammered Jem; "and when you are at home you can neither walk nor talk.

  114. We don't talk and walk before ordinary people; we keep our accomplishments for our own amusement, and for the amusement of our friends.

  115. You are chilled through, poor child," he said; "and you are not strong enough to walk just now.

  116. But Mademoiselle de Rochemont never seemed exactly of flesh and blood--she was more like a marble female saint who had descended from her pedestal to walk upon the earth.

  117. He comes back and tells us it is ready, and we walk down a pair of stairs and out into the train shed.

  118. This professor had several blocks to walk to the college, and the students decided to place themselves at frequent intervals along his path, and each one was to comment on how badly he looked, and intimate to him that he was sick.

  119. And what is more wonderful, he does not walk and act as if he was tired or weak; he also looks cheerful and his explanation was full of vim and courage, even though it was nonsense.

  120. As he started on his rapid walk back to Kenlisle at a very brisk pace, for the distance was between four and five miles, and business hours were approaching, Horace put together rapidly the information he had obtained.

  121. This early walk was of two uses--it restored his unsusceptible nerves to the iron condition which was natural to them, and it gave him a chance of finding out in his old fashion anything that there might be to find out.

  122. That was what he had discovered--this was the information which had sent him in nervous haste out of Marchmain, and quickened his solitary walk over the moor--and this was all.

  123. She had come in from her walk and her stolen interview with the one sole companion whom she ever had any intercourse with.

  124. Gone to walk with his pretty daughter, Peggy, like a good papa?

  125. When not in use they are folded by the side after the manner of a fan, and the dragon can then walk or run with considerable agility.

  126. From various points of view its laws regulate the actor's bearing, walk and movements of face and limbs.


  127. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "walk" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    airing; ambit; amble; amphitheater; area; arena; art; auditorium; background; bailiwick; beat; berm; boardwalk; border; borderland; bowl; business; calling; campus; canvas; career; catwalk; champaign; circle; circuit; circus; cockpit; constitutional; course; craft; crawl; creep; cycle; dash; demesne; department; discipline; domain; dominion; drag; droop; esplanade; excursion; field; file; floor; flounce; foot; forum; gait; gallop; game; groove; ground; gymnasium; hall; handicraft; heat; hemisphere; hike; hitch; hobble; hoof; idle; inch; itinerary; jaunt; jurisdiction; lap; laze; leg; lifework; limp; line; locale; loop; lurch; march; marketplace; mat; metier; milieu; mill; mince; mission; mosey; motion; mush; mystery; number; occupation; orb; orbit; pace; pad; paddle; palaestra; pale; parade; path; pathway; perambulate; pit; place; platform; plod; poke; practice; prance; precinct; profession; promenade; province; purlieu; pursuit; race; rack; racket; ramble; range; realm; regatta; region; relay; revolution; ring; road; roam; roll; round; route; run; runway; rut; saunter; scene; scenery; scuttle; setting; shamble; shortcut; shuffle; sidewalk; sidle; site; slither; slouch; slowness; specialization; specialty; sphere; sprint; stadium; stage; stagger; stalk; step; stream; stretch; stride; stroll; strut; swagger; swing; terrain; territory; theater; toddle; totter; tour; towpath; track; trade; trail; trajectory; tramp; traverse; tread; trot; trudge; turn; velocity; vocation; waddle; walk; walkway; work; worm


    Some related collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    walk about; walk along; walk away; walk back; walk before; walk from; walk home; walk over; walk upon; walk with; walk worthy; walked about; walked along; walked away; walked back; walked down; walked forward; walked home; walked over; walked slowly; walked straight; walked together; walking about; walking pace; walking tour