Pedestrians do not just walk. They rush, they dawdle, they stroll, they amble, they circle, they pause, they stop, they edge past, they saunter, they plod, they advance, they retreat, they backtrack, they lead, they follow. Walking happens as a host of more prepositional, intentional and consequential actions: they walk towards, they walk away, they walk off, they walk into. Nor do pedestrians make naked contact with the places where they are walking: hiking shoes protect their feet while hillwalking, price tags and labels shape their trajectory while shopping, podcasts envelope them in comic dialogues while they walk to work.