walk-in
nounEtymology
Deverbal from walk in.
Definitions
A facility or room which may be walked into
A facility or room which may be walked into:
Someone who walks in (to a place, etc)
Someone who walks in (to a place, etc):
- An astute manager will have a table or two set aside for important regular customers or demanding walk-ins.
- Any patient with such a history and any woman who has not received prenatal care or who is a walk-in—an unexpected patient with no prenatal chart—will have toxicology labs done,
- others may be getting their first medication through the new Doorway program at Lakes Region General Hospital, which works with walk-ins as well as people referred by the state's 2-1-1 health services crisis line.
A demonstration or protest in which the participants assemble outside a facility, gain…
A demonstration or protest in which the participants assemble outside a facility, gain media exposure, and enter the facility in unison.
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A person whose original soul has departed the body and been replaced with another.
- This soul-exchange happens without the body dying. Star People and Walk-ins can be of either orientation—positive or negative—although most from fifth density and beyond are positive.
That may be walked into
That may be walked into:
- On multiple occasions, beginning when she was 12, Sara went to her local GP and to walk-in clinics wearing her hijab to get the morning-after pill.
Gaining access through unlocked doors.
- … (locations, that are vulnerable to walk-in robbery), which makes isolation of the value from UCR statistics impossible.
- [...], not least because the offence can vary from a quick walk-in theft to planned and targeted plundering.
A headmate who shows up in a system fully formed.
The neighborhood
- neighborwalk-up
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for walk-in. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA