How To Use Walkabout In A Sentence

  • At photo opportunities or on walkabouts, he seemed to see a Private Eye cover picture in every handshake or pram.
  • But the glamorous trio still made time for a half-hour walkabout to greet the 4,000 screaming fans who had packed Leicester Square.
  • The Duchess could commit a faux pas on a walkabout. Times, Sunday Times
  • For exercise, he should try eightsome reels, riding sidesaddle, deer stalking and walkabouts through shopping centres. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was ambushed by angry protesters during a walkabout in Bolton.
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  • On a recent walkabout with my fellow ward councillors, we picked up on numerous problems with litter, bin bags, problem gullies, unswept roads - and I know the situation is similar elsewhere.
  • Former US President Bill Clinton stunned shoppers with an impromptu walkabout yesterday, after enjoying a Yorkshire pub lunch.
  • The press conference was followed by a walkabout and a factory visit.
  • She also excels at things we think of as entirely modern, such as walkabouts.
  • The Duchess could commit a faux pas on a walkabout. Times, Sunday Times
  • Remember what royal walkabout photographs were like before Diana? Times, Sunday Times
  • Later she went on a walkabout from Durham Market Place to Millennium Place where people, cheering and waving Union Jacks, packed the pavements to see her.
  • We as society slowly move closer to the axiom “that the land has always been ours,” aiming to provide an united and monolithic view of a historical walkabout from the Paleolithic to Tito, even though some of the episodes are not quite “safe” and lead to the above mentioned failures of reason. Global Voices in English » Macedonia: Alexander the Great as Media Bait
  • But security concerns are paramount and there was no question of a royal walkabout in Nigeria's teeming slums.
  • The latest Walkabout club is yet another burden on the already overstretched emergency and public services.
  • Also, his skeleton has gone on a royal walkabout. Times, Sunday Times
  • The 28-year-old star gave the 2,000-strong crowd a treat with a five-minute walkabout before the screening of Gangs of New York.
  • There was walkabout land with food, a billabong.
  • But another source said the cards were not all stacked in Regent's favour, as it needed to close a deal in order to strengthen its pubs portfolio beyond Walkabout bars.
  • Spectators lined the route of the president's walkabout.
  • Van Rooyen shook all the right hands, made promises and also did the walkabouts, not into suburbia, but the platteland.
  • Earlier she was bombarded with selfie requests as she showed off her toned abs on a walkabout. The Sun
  • Then this ginger and white coloured rat came out of the bag and went walkabout around the seat and up onto the girl's lap.
  • I have been trying to make my mind up if this shambles over the two data discs which have gone walkabout is a sea-change moment or not. Archive 2007-11-18
  • Earlier she was bombarded with selfie requests as she showed off her toned abs on a walkabout. The Sun
  • He was arrested yesterday 50 minutes before the pair met hundreds of people at a walkabout in Auckland. The Sun
  • The press conference was followed by a walkabout and a factory visit.
  • He was ambushed by angry protesters during a walkabout in Bolton.
  • At countless walkabouts, official openings, celebrations and her own garden parties, she has demonstrated that she is as friendly as she is regal.
  • Earlier, more than 20,000 people welcomed the royal couple to a shopping mall in Solihull as they staged an impromptu walkabout.
  • John: Walkabout is a journey of spiritual renewal. Where one derive strength from the earth.
  • Your moral sense, your conscience, has gone walkabout. Times, Sunday Times
  • He failed to show up for a scheduled walkabout at the London Stock Exchange this week, leaving half a dozen of his candidates to get drenched by a thunderstorm.
  • New Zealanders are understandably proud that the Queen chose their country for the first-ever walkabout eleven years ago.
  • She laughed and joked with well-wishers during a walkabout after signing a charter to mark the official launch of the city's new super-university.
  • The Queen Mother was someone who made sure her people came first, and officials had a job keeping her away from unofficial walkabouts.
  • I just went walkabout on the pitch to compose myself. The Sun
  • One of the key attractions for many international visitors is the romance and mystique attached to Aboriginal culture, dreamtimes and walkabouts, learning a little more about the oldest civilization in the world.
  • The press conference was followed by a walkabout and a factory visit.
  • Kind of a 'walkabout' or as the Chilangos say ... "ir puebleando". Should I be nervous?
  • I'm still puddy tat hunting (mine has gone walkabout) and I'm meeting my best friend for lunch tomorrow at Wagamamas. Weekly Catchup
  • My pen was here this morning but it seems to have gone walkabout.
  • The traditional walkabout saw the Fine Gael leader mix and mingle with the locals with consummate ease.
  • John: Walkabout is a journey of spiritual renewal. Where one derive strength from the earth.
  • There was no walkabout, which is a great pity, I think, given the reception they got when they arrived, an even bigger reception when they came out as man and wife. CNN Transcript Apr 9, 2005
  • The prince met local people during a walkabout in Glasgow's George Square.
  • Their journey coincides with that of an Aborigine boy on his walkabout - a 10-day ritual where boys are left to fend for themselves, an event that initiates their entrance into adulthood.
  • Donald's love of sport was not some kind of affectation designed to bring him street credibility in constituency walkabouts.
  • Freeform drumming enters to impose order upon the 7-minute walkabout as it assembles itself with subtle shadings of tone and color.
  • There was walkabout land with food, a billabong.
  • He did recover his composure and went on an hour-long walkabout with the Leicester Square crowds, signing autographs and chatting on mobile phones in customary fashion.
  • By noon the prince will be meeting residents, schoolchildren and groups on a traditional royal walkabout.
  • On the way, they are helped by an aboriginal boy on his walkabout.
  • Two bodyguards remained a couple of paces behind the president throughout the walkabout.
  • Burke wants his talk with the irrepressible raconteur to take place as an actionless walkabout. The Speculist: Luckily, we don't face these challenges...
  • Their journey coincides with that of an Aborigine boy on his walkabout - a 10-day ritual where boys are left to fend for themselves, an event that initiates their entrance into adulthood.
  • On a walkabout in Brent East, he accused Mr Blair of insulting the intelligence of electors by warning that voting Lib Dem would produce a Tory government.
  • On his way to Napier today for a lunchtime walkabout Dr Brash said the vandalism ‘showed how far standards had slipped in the education system under Labour’.
  • William Hague was right about one thing: reality bites - but even he has started cancelling his walkabouts.
  • Lavanya was thrilled to meet and interact with them - she talks about stolen generations, displacement, lost souls, land issues, heritage, dreamtimes and walkabouts.
  • There will be no ceremonial drive down the Mall with the Queen, no Lord Mayor's Banquet at the Guildhall, no walkabouts to meet the people.
  • After the service the Queen and Duke went on a walkabout in the castle grounds and chatted to the large crowd of well-wishers.
  • Any criticisms of England's boring and stodgy play were crushed as the team surged forward, sending The Walkabout crowd into a screaming frenzy.
  • The press conference was followed by a walkabout and a factory visit.
  • I discovered that the blacks insisted on a "pink-hi" or walkabout season - they could not live without it.
  • Not for him the public walkabouts among adoring throngs that marked Bill Clinton's jovial foreign jaunts.
  • Later, in Drogheda, it's Charlie who leads the charge on the canvas, with a walkabout that can only be described as swashbuckling.
  • A palpable hush descended on the hundreds of spectators as they waited for the Bentley to stop and for the Queen to emerge to begin her walkabout.
  • And his putting, devastatingly good when he is on song, has also gone walkabout. Times, Sunday Times
  • They will attend a service at the Minster before taking a walkabout along Duncombe Place to the Assembly Rooms, where the couple will see a special exhibition about York's history.
  • The prime minister has been embarking on a hectic schedule of overseas trips, summits, policy initiatives, walkabouts and social engagements.
  • I like to go walkabout. Times, Sunday Times
  • Kind of a 'walkabout' or as the locals say ... irme a pueblear. Traveling next month... any advice on room & board?
  • Even today aborigines in the outback habitually go walkabout to experience what they call the ‘songlines’.

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