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The phrase "a hurried walk" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a walking pace that is faster than usual, often due to urgency or a need to reach a destination quickly.
Example: "She took a hurried walk to the bus stop, hoping not to miss her ride."
Alternatives: "a brisk walk" or "a quick walk".
Exact(3)
This spring, he courteously received this unannounced visitor and offered a hurried walk through the ground floor.
For once, I spent nothing before trying out a hurried walk that developed into the current scuttle.
Some of the details that emerged on Wednesday — a drive to the mall, a crowded food court, a hurried walk inside, assault rifle in hand, screams and chaos in a panicked search for shelter — were unique to the case but numbingly similar to other recent mass shootings, notably the killings in a packed movie theater in Aurora, Colo., in July.
Similar(57)
He came to the stage after a hurried flight from Milan to New York and a hurried walk-through of "Tosca" on Friday.
I think I was on the plane, coming back from China, when I started drawing weird men walking in a hurried way, with furry tails and wooden diamond heels!
Birds are almost always there, somehow, to be seen on hurried walks to the subway station, or from passing trains and cars.
What starts out as a brisk walk soon becomes a hurried trot.
He was working and didn't seem like he wanted to talk, so after a hurried, "It's great to see you," I walked away from the store.
From there it was a hurried flurry of plywood shavings and bandsaw screechings as Billy walked us step-by-step through the building of a mini ramp that can service a couple thousand partygoers.
This is a hurried response to a hurried bill.
A hurried pace had picked up again.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com