deambular
walk (a)round ; wander about ; meander ; roam (about/around) ; wander around ; range ; wander ; rove ; cruise ; go about ; maunder.
He got up, and, putting hands in the pockets of his trousers, began to walk around the room.
He was a loner himself, a small-town country boy who spent most of his time wandering about the hills and fields near his home.
They are mixed up as the talk meanders about, apparently without conscious pattern.
Unless children are given time to roam about unhindered among books of many kinds, left alone to choose for themselves, and to do what any avid adult reader does, then maybe we labor in vain.
The audience can wander around at will and discuss with contributors and each other.
We will be bringing scholars from all over the world both to range widely in our multiform collections and put things together rather than just take them apart.
The article is entitled 'Wandering the Web: further developments on the global information bazaar'.
The production is extremely lively: Wandering musicians rove the tiny stage and aisles, competing with birdsong and baroque concertos over the tannoy.
The system also has an add-on, which allows users with low vision to cruise the Internet using a low vision interface.
The police thought he was mental and arrested him when he was going about in his birthday suit.
For two weeks now he had been maundering around the woods, dejectedly shooting anything that moved.
deambular libremente
wander + at large
roam + free
Spreading out from the doorstep is a wider social group whose influence comes to bear on children, particularly after they are old enough to wander at large on their own.
While in traditional working society, everybody was kept busy, and out of trouble, a leisured society would be one in which people roamed free and unfettered, and capable of absolutely anything.
deambular por
perambulate about
The principal sprang up from her chair and began to perambulate with swift, precise movements about her spacious office.