walk off

listen to the pronunciation of walk off
English - English
To flee or abandon
To recover from (a minor injury) by walking around
go away from; "The actor walked off before he got his cue"; "I got annoyed and just walked off"
take without permission; "he walked off with my wife!"; "The thief walked off with my gold watch
take without permission; "he walked off with my wife!"; "The thief walked off with my gold watch"
go away, leave, depart
walk off with
go away with stolen merchandise, steal; leave with, earn
walk off with
If you walk off with something such as a prize, you win it or get it very easily. The delighted pensioner walked off with a £2,000 prize. = walk away with
walk it off
To deal with an negative emotional event without complaint; to take it like a man

After Emma broke up with him to date a football player, Steve made a valiant effort to just walk it off, but felt he was dying on the inside.

walk it off
To walk or pace in order to relieve a pain or cramp

After six miles into the marathon, I had a stabbing pain in my side, but I was able to walk it off and complete the race.

walk-off
That drives in a run that ends a game

Scott Podsednik hit the twelfth walk-off home run in World Series history on October 23rd, 2005.

walk-off
A walkout
walk-off
A prisoner who escapes custody without violence by taking advantage of the opportunity provided by negligence or distraction of guards
walk-off
Any event or action in the bottom of the last inning of a game that scores a run and thereby ends the game with a victory to the team at bat
walk off

    Turkish pronunciation

    wôk ôf

    Pronunciation

    /ˈwôk ˈôf/ /ˈwɔːk ˈɔːf/

    Etymology

    [ 'wok ] (verb.) before 12th century. partly from Middle English walken , from Old English wealcan to roll, toss, journey about and partly from Middle English walkien , from Old English wealcian to roll up, muffle up; akin to Middle Dutch walken to knead, press, full.
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