Someone who is "walking tall" carries himself with pride and confidence.
Example: After her successful sales pitch, Lynn was walking tall.
The Keep Walking phrase was used in the Johnnie Walker advert. The meaning of the phrase is to keep on drinking Johnnie Walker as encouraged in the advert.
the accepted meaning of a term
in the phrase generally accepted accounting principles means
Ummmmmm,,,,..
The phrase "all-walking autumn" does not have a widely recognized or established meaning. It may be open to interpretation, but it could suggest a season where the act of walking, perhaps through fallen leaves or changing landscapes, plays a prominent role in experiencing and observing autumn.
"Is walking to the parking garage" is a clause because it contains a subject ("walking") and a verb ("is").
"Sighing loudly" is the participle phrase in the sentence "Sighing loudly, Kristen accepted her punishment." It describes how Kristen accepted her punishment.
The correct phrase is "walking past" as it indicates movement in relation to something else.
It seems that suddenly in the past few years everyone under a certain age is using the phrase "based off". I can only guess that some character on a popular TV show used this phrase a lot. There is actually NO such word-phrase in the English language. "Based off" is, in fact, meaningless. Something can NOT be "based" and "off" at the same time. I believe the meaning you kids are attempting to get across is actually the meaning conveyed by the accepted English word-phrase, "based on", meaning "started from or founded on."
Her bohemian ideals were not readily accepted in Victorian times.
accepted?
Although there could be multiple meanings of this Spanish phrase "periodicos de Bolivia" the widely accepted meaning of this term is "Newspapers in Bolivia".