skip vs walk

skip

verb
  • To move by hopping on alternate feet. 

  • To cause the stylus to jump back to the previous loop of the record's groove, continously repeating that part of the sound, as a result of excessive scratching or wear. 

  • To skim, ricochet or bounce over a surface. 

  • To pass by a stitch as if it were not there, continuing with the next stitch. 

  • To place an item in a skip (etymology 2, sense 1). 

  • To throw (something), making it skim, ricochet, or bounce over a surface. 

  • To disregard, miss or omit part of a continuation (some item or stage). 

  • To have insufficient ink transfer. 

  • To leap about lightly. 

  • Not to attend (some event, especially a class or a meeting). 

  • To jump rope. 

  • To leave, especially in a sudden and covert manner. 

  • To leap lightly over. 

noun
  • A large open-topped container for waste, designed to be lifted onto the back of a truck to remove it along with its contents. (see also skep). 

  • A college servant. 

  • A skip car. 

  • The player who calls the shots and traditionally throws the last two rocks. 

  • An Australian of Anglo-Celtic descent. 

  • A leaping, jumping or skipping movement. 

  • The scoutmaster of a troop of scouts (youth organization) and their form of address to him. 

  • The act of passing over an interval from one thing to another; an omission of a part. 

  • A wheeled basket used in cotton factories. 

  • A skep, or basket, such as a creel or a handbasket. 

  • A person who attempts to disappear so as not to be found. 

  • A charge of syrup in the pans. 

  • A passage from one sound to another by more than a degree at once. 

  • skywave propagation 

  • The captain of a sports team. Also, a form of address by the team to the captain. 

  • The captain of a bowls team, who directs the team's tactics and rolls the side's last wood, so as to be able to retrieve a difficult situation if necessary. 

  • A beehive. 

  • A transportation container in a mine, usually for ore or mullock. 

walk

verb
  • To move something by shifting between two positions, as if it were walking. 

  • To allow a batter to reach base by pitching four balls. 

  • To push (a vehicle) alongside oneself as one walks. 

  • To be stirring; to be abroad; to go restlessly about; said of things or persons expected to remain quiet, such as a sleeping person, or the spirit of a dead person. 

  • To walk off the field, as if given out, after the fielding side appeals and before the umpire has ruled; done as a matter of sportsmanship when the batsman believes he is out. 

  • To behave; to pursue a course of life; to conduct oneself. 

  • To leave, resign. 

  • To put, keep, or train (a puppy) in a walk, or training area for dogfighting. 

  • To move a guest to another hotel if their confirmed reservation is not available on day of check-in. 

  • To operate the left and right throttles of (an aircraft) in alternation. 

  • To move on the feet by alternately setting each foot (or pair or group of feet, in the case of animals with four or more feet) forward, with at least one foot on the ground at all times. Compare run. 

  • To traverse by walking (or analogous gradual movement). 

  • To take for a walk or accompany on a walk. 

  • Of an object, to go missing or be stolen. 

  • To travel (a distance) by walking. 

  • To full; to beat cloth to give it the consistency of felt. 

  • To "walk free", i.e. to win, or avoid, a criminal court case, particularly when actually guilty. 

noun
  • A situation where all players fold to the big blind, as their first action (instead of calling or raising), once they get their cards. 

  • A distance walked. 

  • A sequence of alternating vertices and edges, where each edge's endpoints are the preceding and following vertices in the sequence. 

  • Something very easily accomplished; a walk in the park. 

  • A manner of walking; a person's style of walking. 

  • An Olympic Games track event requiring that the heel of the leading foot touch the ground before the toe of the trailing foot leaves the ground. 

  • A trip made by walking. 

  • An award of first base to a batter following four balls being thrown by the pitcher; known in the rules as a "base on balls". 

  • In coffee, coconut, and other plantations, the space between them. 

  • A place for keeping and training puppies for dogfighting. 

  • An enclosed area in which a gamecock is confined to prepare him for fighting. 

  • A person's conduct or course in life. 

  • An area of an estate planted with fruit-bearing trees. 

  • A path, sidewalk/pavement or other maintained place on which to walk. 

How often have the words skip and walk occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )