n. n. In the West Indies, a plantation of coffee, cinnamon, cacao, pimento, or other trees yielding valuable fruits or spices.To be in action or motion; act; move; go; be current.To be stirring; be abroad; move about.To go restlessly about; move about, as an unquiet spirit or specter, or as one in a state of somnambulism.To move off; depart.To live and act or behave in any particular manner; conduct one's self; pursue a particu lar course of life.To move with the gait called a walk. See walk, n., 5.To go or travel on foot: often followed by an accusative of distance: as, to walk five miles.To move, after a manner somewhat analogous to walking, as an effect of repeated oscillations and twistings produced by expansion and contraction or by the action of winds. Chimneys have been known to move in this manner.To fall foul of verbally; give a scolding to.To eat heartily of.To full, as cloth.To proceed or move through, over, or upon by walking, or as if by walking; traverse at a walk.To cause to walk; lead, drive, or ride at a walk.To escort in a walk; take to walk.To move, as a box or trunk, in a manner having some analogy to walking, partly by a rocking motion, and partly by turning the object on its resting-point in such manner that at each rocking movement an alternate point of support is employed, the last one used being always in advance of the previous one in the direction toward which the object is to be moved.To send to or keep in a walk. See walk, n., 8 .n. Manner of action; course, as of life; way of living: as, a person's walk and conversation.n. Range or sphere of action; a department, as of art, science, or literature.n. The act of walking for air or exercise; a stroll: as, a morning walk.n. Manner of walking; gait; step; carriage.n. The slowest gait of land-animals.n. A piece of ground fit to walk in; a place in which one is accustomed to walk; a haunt.n. A place laid out or set apart for walking; an avenue; a promenade.n. Specifically— An avenue set with trees or laid out in a grove or wood.n. plural Grounds; a park.n. A path in or as in a garden or street; a sidewalk: as, a flagged walk; a plank walk.n. In public parks and the like, a place or way for retirement: as, gentlemen's walk.n. A piece of ground on which domestic animals feed or have exercise.n. Specifically— A tract of some extent where sheep feed; a pasture for sheep; a sheep-walk. See sheep-run.n. A place where puppies are kept and trained for sporting purposes.n. A pen in which a gamecock is kept with a certain amount of liberty, but separated from other cocks, to get him in condition and disposition for fighting.n. A district habitually served by a hawker or itinerant vender of any commodity.n. In the London Royal Exchange, any part of the ambulatory that is specially frequented by merchants or traders to some particular country.n. A district in a royal forest or park marked out for hunting purposes.n. A ropewalk.n. In falconry, a flock or wisp of snipe.