v. rare. Obs. pa. pple. ambulate. [f. L. ambulāt- ppl. stem of ambulā-re to walk.] To walk, move about.
1623. Cockeram, Ambulate, To moue hither and thither.
1724. Ramsay, Evergreen, II. 65. I haif ambulate on Parnasso the mountain [orig., I perambulate].
1794. Southey, in Life (1849), I. 215. Burnett ambulated to Bristol with me.
1814. Byron, in Moore, Life (1866), 246. Without once quitting the table except to ambulate home.