[
US
/ˈstɹoʊɫ/
]
[ UK /stɹˈəʊl/ ]
[ UK /stɹˈəʊl/ ]
VERB
- walk leisurely and with no apparent aim
NOUN
- a leisurely walk (usually in some public place)
How To Use stroll In A Sentence
- On his first day there he approached a couple of elegant young toffs strolling around the campus. Times, Sunday Times
- Not feeling hungry again until about ten that night, we strolled along to the same street that had earlier been alive with culinary possibilities. Times, Sunday Times
- Their lasagna is like eating a cloud .... the little museum next to the church has some interesting objects, and the best entertainment of all is a nice long stroll around town. tashby Current Info on San Sebastian del Oeste
- Coins jingled freely in his pocket as he strolled toward the man and his cart.
- Strolling vendors sold felt hats, plastic balls, ice cream and candyfloss.
- A stroll down a supermarket aisle is enlivened by signs such as this one: June « 2009 « Sentence first
- A local publication, The Evening Bulletin said, ‘The reporter had been horrified to see two fatted calves strolling up main street!’
- The gardener strolled off, his golden gown soon lost in the golden expanse of grass, accompanied by several small animals which capered at his feet, circled his head or hopped off and on his shoulders.
- Despite this apparent initial failure, which was openly scorned by China's state media as "performance art", the boxun.com blog site asked again for what it called "strolling protests" against the ruling Communist Party at 2pm on Sunday. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
- Sisko strolled along the path as it weaved through colorful, variegated flowerbeds, trying to let his surroundings bolster his mood further in his last few hours on Bajor. Star Trek: Typhon Pact: Rough Beasts of Empire