miswalk

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

mis- +‎ walk

Verb[edit]

miswalk (third-person singular simple present miswalks, present participle miswalking, simple past and past participle miswalked)

  1. (transitive, intransitive, sometimes figurative) To walk along the wrong path.
    • 1863, Isaac Penington, The Works of Isaac Penington, page 31:
      For there is another spirit near man, whose nature, work, and delight is to cause man to misunderstand, and miswalk by the very scriptures; and will bring things as warmly and (as it were) clearly to him, as he can from scriptures, purposely to deceive and mislead him.
    • 1941, Cyril Harris, Richard Pryne: A Novel of the American Revolution, page 87:
      Sue withdrew to the kitchen, very much aware that she had committed a folly as bad or worse than miswalking a minuet.
    • 1991, Salem Quarter: The Quakers of Salem Quarterly Meeting of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends in Southern New Jersey from 1675-1990, page 214:
      This visit was probably about the concern of Fenwick's business and land titles, rather than any miswalking or violation of Discipline.
    • 2006, Adam Phillips, Sigmund Freud, The Penguin Freud Reader:
      The stroller who barely knows where he is going still keeps to the right path and stops at his destination without having miswalked. At least he gets there as a rule.