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Walking on a tight rope



 
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ESL Forums | English Vocabulary, Grammar and Idioms
difference between "while" and "whereas" | go+take or going+taking
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Walking on a tight rope #1 (permalink) Wed Jul 02, 2008 9:09 am   Walking on a tight rope
 

Hi

Do we walk a tightrope or walk on a tightrope? Also what do we call a person who does that?

Thanks in advance,

Tom
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Walking on a tight rope #2 (permalink) Wed Jul 02, 2008 9:24 am   Walking on a tight rope
 

Hi Tom,

'Walk a tightrope' is figurative and 'walk on a tightrope' is literal. You walk a tightrope when you are in a delicate situation and you have to be very diplomatic because you don't want to upset either side in a dispute or argument. This is the sort of position that an arbitrator has to take when there is a strike between management and employees. 'Walk on a tightrope' is an act in a circus for example or that famous occasion when a man (forgotten his name) walked on a wire (rope) strung between the Twin Towers in New York's World Trade Center.

Alan
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Walking on a tight rope #3 (permalink) Wed Jul 02, 2008 11:08 am   Walking on a tight rope
 

Thankyou, Alan.

Could you please also tell me what we call a person who walks on a tightrope?

Tom
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Walking on a tight rope #4 (permalink) Wed Jul 02, 2008 11:45 am   Walking on a tight rope
 

They are simply called "tightrope walkers" Smile
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Walking on a tight rope #5 (permalink) Wed Jul 02, 2008 11:51 am   Walking on a tight rope
 

I think you can use "walk a tightrope" and "walk on a tightrope" in both literal and figurative meanings. However, "walk a tightrope" is more commonly figurative.

In the circus, when someone is literally walking a tightrope, we usually say he is walking the tightrope.
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Walking on a tight rope #6 (permalink) Wed Jul 02, 2008 16:15 pm   Walking on a tight rope
 

In my dictionary, "walk a tight rope" means both in the circus and delicate situation. Is it right?
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Walking on a tight rope #7 (permalink) Wed Jul 02, 2008 22:55 pm   Walking on a tight rope
 

Tom wrote:
Could you please also tell me what we call a person who walks on a tightrope?


A less common word than "tightrope walker" is "funambulist".

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