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I would like to know the difference between "walk to" and "walk up to"
I would like to know the difference between "walk to" and "walk up to"
Please help me!
Thanks!
May 21, 2013 12:42 AM
Answers · 6
3
They are very similar, of course. And sometimes, they can be used interchangeably. However, there is a slight difference.
"walk to" means to go somewhere, but it doesn't necessarily reference a specific spot and it doesn't say anything about what you will do when you get there.
I will walk to school. (But then I will walk to my first classroom.)
"walk up to" has a feeling of going to a specific spot for a defined purpose and stopping.
Walk up to that man in the park. (He will show you where to find the statue.)
May 21, 2013
2
Mojave's explanation is pretty good, except that I would go one step further, and say that you 'walk up to' an object (including a person).
You walk to the park. You walk up to a man, and ask him where the statue is.
You walk to the centre of the park. You walk up to the statue.
May 21, 2013
1
Up simply means reach.
walk to means walking toward
walk up to means walk to reach the destination
Example: Walk up to that man in the park. (He will show you where to find the statue.) Here, it means you walk to reach that man ( He will show you where to find the statute. )
Example: I walk to school. Here it means you are walking toward the destination. (school)
May 21, 2013
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Anotherworld
Language Skills
English, Korean
Learning Language
English
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