walk about
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Verb (intransitive):
- To walk without a specific destination or purpose, often in a relaxed or aimless manner, typically within a limited area.
- To move about on foot, often implying a leisurely pace and a lack of urgency or fixed direction.
Usage
- This verb is used to describe the action of walking for leisure, exercise, or simply to pass time, rather than to travel from one specific point to another. It often conveys a sense of casual movement or wandering.
- It is commonly used with adverbs or prepositional phrases indicating location (e.g., , ).
Examples
- Verb:
- After lunch, we decided to walk about in the old town to explore.
- He likes to walk about in the woods to clear his mind.
- Visitors are free to walk about the museum grounds.
Advanced Usage
- "to be walking about": The continuous form emphasizes the ongoing, current activity of aimless walking.
- I saw your brother walking about in the square earlier.
- The phrase can sometimes imply a state of being mobile or active after a period of rest or confinement.
- The patient is recovering well and is now able to walk about the hospital corridor.
Variants and Related Words
- Walk around: A very close synonym, often used interchangeably with "walk about."
- We spent the afternoon walking around the city.
- Stroll: (verb) To walk in a leisurely, relaxed way. This is a more specific synonym.
- Wander: (verb) To walk or move in a casual, aimless, or sometimes lost manner. This can imply a greater lack of direction than "walk about."
Synonyms
- Amble: To walk at a slow, relaxed pace.
- Roam: To move about or travel without a fixed plan or destination.
- Ramble: To walk for pleasure, often in the countryside.
Related Phrasal Verbs
- Walk off: To depart by walking, often used with an emotion (e.g., ). This implies purposeful movement away from a point.
- Walk around: As noted above, it is functionally identical to "walk about" in its core meaning of aimless walking.
Related Idioms
- Take a walk: An idiom meaning to go for a walk, often for leisure or to calm down. It is a more general phrase than "walk about."
- I need to clear my head; I'm going to take a walk.
- Walk the walk: An idiom meaning to act in accordance with your claims or promises. This is conceptually different from the physical act of "walking about."
- It's easy to talk about change, but you have to walk the walk.
Verb
- walk with no particular goal
- we were walking around in the garden
- after breakfast, she walked about in the park