walkalong
English
Noun
walkalong (plural walkalongs)
- (sociology) A type of interview in which the interviewer and subject walk together while talking.
- 2016, Garth Lean, Emma Watson, “Travel and Imagination: An Invitation”, in Garth Lean, Russell Staff, editors, Travel and Imagination, →ISBN:
- This chapter draws on our ethnographic analysis of the diaries, walkalongs and followup conversations with Janet, who had recently resigned from a managerial position to look after her first child.
- A police detail or other group that walks with someone.
- 1988 August 26, Steve Bogira, Hank De Zutter, Ron Dorfman, Robert McClory, David Moberg, Grant Pick, Gary Rivlin, “They Were There”, in Chicago Reader:
- In the period before, when Martin Luther King was here walking through the different neighborhoods, I was in the walkalongs, the police protection, on the north side and on the south side.
- A small forklift used for pallets.
- A dandy-horse, a 19th-century precursor of the bicycle.
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