Need another word that means the same as “walkway”? Find 14 synonyms and 30 related words for “walkway” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Walkway” are: paseo, walk, pathway, path, footpath, track, lane, alley, alleyway, promenade, trail, trackway, ride, towpath
Walkway as a Noun
Definitions of "Walkway" as a noun
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “walkway” as a noun can have the following definitions:
- A passage or path for walking along, especially a raised passageway connecting different sections of a building or a wide path in a park or garden.
- A path set aside for walking.
Synonyms of "Walkway" as a noun (14 Words)
alley | A narrow street with walls on both sides. A skittle alley. |
alleyway | A narrow street with walls on both sides. |
footpath | A trodden path. |
lane | An urban street. DNA from various sources is placed in separate lanes on an electrophoretic gel. |
paseo | A path set aside for walking. |
path | A course of conduct. Genius usually follows a revolutionary path. |
pathway | A route, formed by a chain of nerve cells, along which impulses of a particular kind usually travel. A tree lined pathway. |
promenade | A march of all the guests at the opening of a formal dance. An evening promenade. |
ride | A mechanical device that you ride for amusement or excitement. I took them for a ride in the van. |
towpath | A path beside a river or canal, originally used as a pathway for horses towing barges. |
track | The soundtrack of a film or video. The undercarriage was fully retractable inwards into the wing with a 90 inch track. |
trackway | A path formed by the repeated treading of people or animals. A narrow beaten trackway into the forest. |
trail | A trailer for a film or broadcast. We drove down in a trail of tourist cars. |
walk | A path set aside for walking. Walking is a healthy form of exercise. |
Associations of "Walkway" (30 Words)
across | From one side to the other of a place, area, etc. A crater some 30 metres across. |
banister | A single upright at the side of a staircase. She peered over the banisters. |
boulevard | A wide street in a town or city, typically one lined with trees. Sunset Boulevard. |
bridge | The central part of a pair of glasses fitting over the bridge of the nose. Earlier attempts to bridge St George s Channel had failed. |
building | The occupants of a building. The building of democracy in Guatemala. |
colonnade | Structure consisting of a row of evenly spaced columns. |
cross | A cross as an emblem of Christianity. A hybrid tea was crossed with a polyantha rose. |
crossover | The appropriation of a new style (especially in popular music) by combining elements of different genres in order to appeal to a wider audience. A crossover study. |
double | A double measure of spirits. Large double blooms. |
drawbridge | A bridge, especially one over a castle’s moat, which is hinged at one end so that it may be raised to prevent people crossing or to allow vessels to pass under it. There was a rattle of chains as the drawbridge was lowered. |
elevator | A platform or compartment housed in a shaft for raising and lowering people or things to different levels; a lift. Elevators of the upper lip. |
escalator | A stairway whose steps move continuously on a circulating belt. |
hall | A college or university building containing living quarters for students. For a brief time they had shared a room in hall. |
highway | (chiefly in official use) a public road. The highway to success. |
intersection | An act of intersecting. A red light at the intersection with Brompton Road. |
landing | An intermediate platform in a staircase. The D Day landings. |
lean | Cause to lean or incline. He leaned his elbows on the table. |
overpass | Bridge formed by the upper level of a crossing of two highways at different levels. Did not its sublimity overpass a little the bounds of the ridiculous. |
path | A way especially designed for a particular use. The path of virtue. |
pavement | A raised paved or asphalted path for pedestrians at the side of a road. The pavements and columns of these ancient ruins provided the material for more recent structures. |
pedestrian | Lacking inspiration or excitement; dull. A pedestrian movie plot. |
railing | Material for making rails or rails collectively. Wrought iron railings. |
road | A railroad. He had to work in a road about six feet wide. |
roadway | The part of a road intended for vehicles, in contrast to the pavement or verge. |
route | Send via a specific route. Proposals have been put forward for a new route around the south of the town. |
skyway | A raised motorway. Skyways from 18 000 to 40 000 feet resemble a highway system. |
staircase | A way of access (upward and downward) consisting of a set of steps. He descended the broad staircase. |
stairway | A way of access (upward and downward) consisting of a set of steps. A narrow stone stairway. |
traverse | An area of land surveyed with a traverse. A moving catwalk that traversed a vast cavernous space. |
walk | Make walk. He could walk on his hands carrying a plate on one foot. |