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The phrase "a walker to get around" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a mobility aid that helps someone move from one place to another, often used by individuals with mobility challenges.
Example: "After her surgery, she needed a walker to get around the house safely."
Alternatives: "a mobility aid" or "a walking aid".
Exact(10)
So Mr. Boccino, who uses a wheelchair, an electric scooter and a walker to get around, depends on an emergency alert bracelet he wears on his left wrist.
He relies on a cane or a walker to get around, and, as one might expect, he is alert to the irony of aging: when time is short, old age takes up a lot of time.
In court papers, Ms. Shellow says that the circumstances of her client's imprisonment — having to use a walker to get around, and being placed in shackles, a belly chain and handcuffs when she is transported to an outside cancer center — are "cruel and unusual and excessive" punishment, one of the grounds for which she is seeking Ms. Stewart's release.
He recently started using a walker to get around, otherwise known as significant medical progress.
She needed a walker to get around.
At the time, Mr. Logan was still recovering from his broken hip and needed a walker to get around.
Similar(50)
The company views its market as ripe: The senior population is supposed to double by 2030, meaning that more individuals will need walkers to get around on their own.
Ms. Kirschner uses a collapsible three-wheel walker to get around the city and snow makes the walker difficult to push.
My 92-year-old aunt, who is cognitively impaired and requires a walker or wheelchair to get around, still lives in her own apartment, where round-the-clock home health aides help her get to and from the bathroom, bathe, dress and undress, and go outside each day for some fresh air.
Even though he was a frail man who needed a walker or a cane to get around, the cops were apparently threatened by Wrana they even mistook the cane he was brandishing for a machete.
Nearly 90% reported that their child never used a walker, cane, or crutches to get around, but this likely reflects their inability to use these devices rather than their ability to walk.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com