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"stride off" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It means to walk confidently and purposefully away from a place or situation. Example: After finishing his presentation, the CEO strode off the stage, pleased with the positive response from the audience.
Exact(10)
Grab binoculars for guillemots, stride off for the mountains or shore, return to grill supper on the barbecue.
She will effect entry, thrust a catalogue in front of me, ask which set of coasters I prefer and then stride off - leaving the door wide open.
Coaxing some blues from his piano under dim nightclub lights, wearing striped pajamas, E hardly resembled Gordon McRae about to stride off into a cornfield.
Just time for Wenger to take a photo with a young fan who tells him it's perhaps the most beautiful day of his life, to sign the Arsenal shirt he is handed and stride off, destination unknown.
Winding up with the skiffle-indebted Toothpaste Kisses – their Macc'n'cheese moment, if you will – and anomalous Maxïmo Park soundalike Pelican, the Maccabees stride off, another town won over by their fusion of reticence and well-spoken intensity.
For while the paid tour guides provide the public face of the museum, the less visible caretakers are equally responsible for sustaining a lived-in atmosphere, suggesting that, say, Emerson just took up his walking stick to stride off to Walden Pond.
Similar(50)
She strode off.
He and his colleagues then strode off.
Then he tapped my knee and strode off.
He still looks confident as he strode off the green.
Today, he strode off as if he had business elsewhere.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com