walk (L356): Difference between revisions
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Superraptor (talk | contribs) (Added new Sense L356-S91 with [en] gloss: To operate the left and right throttles of an aircraft in alternation.) |
Superraptor (talk | contribs) (Added new Sense L356-S92 with [en] gloss: To move a guest to another hotel if their confirmed reservation is not available on their check-in day.) |
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Sense / L356-S92 / gloss / en | Sense / L356-S92 / gloss / en | ||
To move a guest to another hotel if their confirmed reservation is not available on their check-in day. |
Revision as of 21:36, 24 September 2023
(L356)
Statements
Senses
L356-S1
English | To toss about. |
Statements about L356-S1
L356-S2
English | To turn over. |
Statements about L356-S2
L356-S3
English | To consider. |
Statements about L356-S3
L356-S4
English | Of a body of water, to roll or toss about. |
Statements about L356-S4
L356-S5
English | To fluctuate. |
Statements about L356-S5
L356-S6
English | To roll or be tossed about, to bob up and down. |
Statements about L356-S6
L356-S7
English | To wind or wrap around. |
Statements about L356-S7
L356-S8
English | To go from place to place; to journey or wander. |
Statements about L356-S8
L356-S9
English | To travel across or over. |
Statements about L356-S9
L356-S10
English | Of an object, to be moved, to move, or be in motion. |
Statements about L356-S10
L356-S11
English | Of leaves, to come out. |
Statements about L356-S11
L356-S12
English | Of time, to pass or elapse. |
Statements about L356-S12
L356-S13
English | Of crime, vice, or vitue, to spread or widespread. |
Statements about L356-S13
L356-S14
English | Of a document, wealth, or fame, to circulate or spread. |
Statements about L356-S14
L356-S15
English | Of an idea, to pervade or be pervasive. |
Statements about L356-S15
L356-S16
English | Of a vehicle, to journey regularly. |
Statements about L356-S16
L356-S17
English | Of the tongue or jaws, to move rapidly. |
Statements about L356-S17
L356-S18
English | Of drink, to be circulated around. |
Statements about L356-S18
L356-S19
English | Of a ship, to make progress. |
Statements about L356-S19
L356-S20
English | Of a ship, to move through a body of water. |
Statements about L356-S20
L356-S21
English | To be successful. |
Statements about L356-S21
L356-S22
English | To pass for. |
Statements about L356-S22
L356-S23
English | To conduct oneself or behave in a particular manner. |
Statements about L356-S23
L356-S24
English | To be associated with, work with, or otherwise get along together with. |
Statements about L356-S24
L356-S25
English | To direct one's conduct in accordance with something. |
Statements about L356-S25
L356-S26
English | To proceed upon or act on the basis of. |
Statements about L356-S26
L356-S27
English | Of a person, to go about in public or to go about one's life. |
Statements about L356-S27
L356-S28
English | Of a non-human animal, to range or be found in a particular location. |
Statements about L356-S28
L356-S29
English | To be or live in a certain condition of health. |
Statements about L356-S29
L356-S30
English | To busy oneself or be active in doing something. |
Statements about L356-S30
L356-S31
English | To move or travel about at a regular or relatively slow pace by lifting and setting down each foot in turn, so that at least one foot is always on the ground. |
Statements about L356-S31
L356-S32
English | To move or go from place to place on foot for exercise or as a form of recreation. |
Statements about L356-S32
L356-S33
English | To ride a horse. |
Statements about L356-S33
L356-S34
English | To traverse a distance on foot. |
Statements about L356-S34
L356-S35
English | To move in a manner similar to walking or to walk in an altered or modified fashion. |
Statements about L356-S35
L356-S36
English | Of a horse jockey, to weigh when going on foot. |
Statements about L356-S36
L356-S37
English | In baseball, to reach first base automatically after not hitting at four balls pitched outside the strike zone. |
Statements about L356-S37
L356-S38
English | To be released from a criminal charge without punishment, especially when such punishment is seen as expected or deserved. |
Statements about L356-S38
L356-S39
English | To travel on foot over or through a particular area. |
Statements about L356-S39
L356-S40
English | To travel on foot on or along a path or road. |
Statements about L356-S40
L356-S41
English | Of a ghost or fiend, to be seen moving about. |
Statements about L356-S41
L356-S42
English | Of a deceased person, to return as a ghost. |
Statements about L356-S42
L356-S43
English | To follow or go over a predetermined route or path over the course of one's official duties. |
Statements about L356-S43
L356-S44
English | At Oxford University, said of a proctor or pro-proctor, to patrol the streets at night. |
Statements about L356-S44
L356-S45
English | At Oxford University, said of a proctor, to march to and fro in the Convocation House as part of the degree conferring ceremony. |
Statements about L356-S45
L356-S46
English | To go away, leave, or depart. |
Statements about L356-S46
L356-S47
English | Of an animal, to be stolen. |
Statements about L356-S47
L356-S48
English | Of a thing, to be gotten rid of, thrown away, or to be carried off. |
Statements about L356-S48
L356-S49
English | Of a thing, to go missing and presumed to have been borrowed or stolen. |
Statements about L356-S49
L356-S50
English | To be turned out or to leave against one's will. |
Statements about L356-S50
L356-S51
English | To die. |
Statements about L356-S51
L356-S52
English | In cricket, said of a batter, to dismiss oneself voluntarily by walking toward the pavilion without waiting to be given by the umpire. |
Statements about L356-S52
L356-S53
English | To quit, walk off, or resign from a job. |
Statements about L356-S53
L356-S54
English | To walk along a line or boundary. |
Statements about L356-S54
L356-S55
English | To move on foot upon some surface. |
Statements about L356-S55
L356-S56
English | Of a quadruped, to retain at least two feet on the ground while moving in some direction. |
Statements about L356-S56
L356-S57
English | Of a biped, to return at least one foot on the ground while moving in some direction. |
Statements about L356-S57
L356-S58
English | Of a vehicle or stream, to go about slowly. |
Statements about L356-S58
L356-S59
English | To go through a dance at a walk. |
Statements about L356-S59
L356-S60
English | To win a contest without significant effort. |
Statements about L356-S60
L356-S61
English | In a sporting event, to win easily. |
Statements about L356-S61
L356-S62
English | In jazz, to play a walking bass or walking beat. |
Statements about L356-S62
L356-S63
English | To attend or frequent a particular area or event. |
Statements about L356-S63
L356-S64
English | To walk in one's sleep. |
Statements about L356-S64
L356-S65
English | In shooting, to start by beating the ground with pointers or setters. |
Statements about L356-S65
L356-S66
English | To lead, drive, or ride a horse at a walk. |
Statements about L356-S66
L356-S67
English | To exercise an animal by causing it to walk. |
Statements about L356-S67
L356-S68
English | To force or help a person to walk by holding their arms or pushing them from behind. |
Statements about L356-S68
L356-S69
English | To guide or accompany a person on foot in a specified direction. |
Statements about L356-S69
L356-S70
English | To send round. |
Statements about L356-S70
L356-S71
English | To ring a change in a manner so that the sequence of bells is repeated several times. |
Statements about L356-S71
L356-S72
English | In cribbage, to move the pegs illegally. |
Statements about L356-S72
L356-S73
English | To turn a capstan by walking round it. |
Statements about L356-S73
L356-S74
English | To haul or let out an anchor by walking round the capstan by walking away with a rope or by using a windlass. |
Statements about L356-S74
L356-S75
English | To haul an airship by walking. |
Statements about L356-S75
L356-S76
English | To wheel or push a vehicle such as a bicycle, as opposed to riding it. |
Statements about L356-S76
L356-S77
English | Of a ship, to tow another ship into harbor. |
Statements about L356-S77
L356-S78
English | To swing a firearm so as to describe a straight line on the target with successive hits. |
Statements about L356-S78
L356-S79
English | To cause to move as though walking. |
Statements about L356-S79
L356-S80
English | To train and look after a young hound. |
Statements about L356-S80
L356-S81
English | To keep a gamecock in a walk. |
Statements about L356-S81
L356-S82
English | In baseball, to give up a walk to a batter. |
Statements about L356-S82
L356-S83
English | In angling, to draw a hooked fish though the water by walking upstream or occasionally downstream with the rod. |
Statements about L356-S83
L356-S84
English | To take an academic exam without an aid such as a cheatsheet. |
Statements about L356-S84
L356-S85
English | To banish or eject from a place or location. |
Statements about L356-S85
L356-S86
English | To be released from prison or arrest. |
Statements about L356-S86
L356-S87
English | To release someone from prison or arrest. |
Statements about L356-S87
L356-S88
English | In retail, to lose a customer. |
Statements about L356-S88
L356-S89
English | To gain an acquittal. |
Statements about L356-S89
L356-S90
English | To escape from prison. |
Statements about L356-S90
L356-S91
English | To operate the left and right throttles of an aircraft in alternation. |
Statements about L356-S91
L356-S92
English | To move a guest to another hotel if their confirmed reservation is not available on their check-in day. |
Statements about L356-S92
Forms
L356-F1
Statements about L356-F1
L356-F2
Statements about L356-F2
L356-F3
Statements about L356-F3
L356-F4